Search

Keng D Hsueh

from West Bloomfield, MI
Age ~65

Keng Hsueh Phones & Addresses

  • 3351 Lone Pine Rd, West Bloomfield, MI 48323 (248) 851-1039
  • 6475 Bauervic Blvd, West Bloomfield, MI 48322
  • 5443 Bentley Rd #204, West Bloomfield, MI 48322
  • Livingston, NJ
  • 24060 Middlebelt Rd, Farmington, MI 48336 (248) 426-9973
  • 24060 Middlebelt Rd #25, Farmington, MI 48336 (248) 851-1039
  • Farmington Hills, MI
  • Chicago, IL
  • Los Angeles, CA
  • Dearborn, MI
  • Fort Worth, TX

Work

Position: Building and Grounds Cleaning and Maintenance Occupations

Education

Degree: Associate degree or higher

Emails

Resumes

Resumes

Keng Hsueh Photo 1

Vice President, Usa Gateway Inc. (Gtt Global) & Majestic Vacations

View page
Position:
Vice President, Business Development at USA Gateway Inc. (GTT) and Majestic Vacations
Location:
Greater Detroit Area
Industry:
Information Technology and Services
Work:
USA Gateway Inc. (GTT) and Majestic Vacations - 40+ US Loactons (HQ - Dallas, Texas, USA) since Dec 2005
Vice President, Business Development

Crown Vic/Grand Marquis/Town Car Jan 2005 - Dec 2005
Manager, Vehicle Engineering

Ford Motor Company Sep 2002 - Sep 2003
Chief Engineer, China and Emerging Market Sourcing

Ford Motor Company Nov 2000 - Aug 2002
Manager, Global Bill of Material, MP&L

Ford Motor Company Jan 2000 - Nov 2000
Manager, Demand-to-Delivery, Business Office (Sales & Marketing)
Education:
Wayne State University 1996 - 1999
MBA/M.S, Ford/Engineering Management Master
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) 1984 - 1987
Ph.D, Mechanical Engineering
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) 1983 - 1984
M.S, Mechanical Engineering
National Central University 1977 - 1981
B.S, Mechanical Engineering
Keng Hsueh Photo 2

Vp At Gtt

View page
Position:
VP at GTT
Location:
Greater Detroit Area
Industry:
Transportation/Trucking/Railroad
Work:
GTT
VP
Education:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 1983 - 1987

Business Records

Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Keng Hsueh
Principal
Keng Heush Realtor
Real Estate Agent/Manager
3351 Lone Pne Rd, West Bloomfield, MI 48323
Keng Hsueh
Manager
TURBO TT INTERNATIONAL, INC
Business Services at Non-Commercial Site
17920 Benchmark Dr, Dallas, TX 75252
13313 SW Fwy, Sugar Land, TX 77478
3351 Lone Pne Rd, West Bloomfield, MI 48323

Publications

Us Patents

Sound Detector Device

View page
US Patent:
6360607, Mar 26, 2002
Filed:
Aug 9, 1999
Appl. No.:
09/369829
Inventors:
Francois Charette - Canton MI
Hsiao-An Hsieh - Troy MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Rick Hooker - Westland MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G01N 2914
US Classification:
73587, 73584
Abstract:
A sound detector device for locating and diagnosing sound in a motor vehicle includes a headphone and a plurality of directional microphones. The sound detector device also includes a main unit having a circuit operatively connected to the headphone and the directional microphones for allowing an operator to diagnose sound in the motor vehicle.

Passive System For Speech Enhancement

View page
US Patent:
6527080, Mar 4, 2003
Filed:
Dec 2, 2000
Appl. No.:
09/728805
Inventors:
Dafydd Geraint Davies - Cambridge, GB
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Peter J. Didyk - Dearborn Hgts. MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G10K 1100
US Classification:
181175, 181176, 181141
Abstract:
A passive system for speech enhancement in a motor vehicle includes a headliner adapted to be disposed in an occupant compartment of the motor vehicle. The passive system also includes at least one passive sound reflector disposed in or near the headliner and being sound-reflective and shaped to direct or focus speech between front and rear seat occupants in the occupant compartment of the motor vehicle.

Method And System To Detect Unwanted Noise

View page
US Patent:
6650757, Nov 18, 2003
Filed:
Sep 27, 1999
Appl. No.:
09/405020
Inventors:
David Zhou - Dearborn Heights MI
Francois Charette - Canton MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Hsiao-An Hsieh - Troy MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, LLC - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
A61F 1106
US Classification:
381 714, 386 7112, 386 941, 386 86, 386 711
Abstract:
An apparatus for detecting unwanted noise includes a reference sensor that generates a reference signal in response to stimulation by a source. A combined noise detector picks up a combined noise signal, which includes both background noise and the unwanted noise generated by the source. A noise separation synthesis device filters both signals to generate a coherent unwanted noise signal from the combined noise signal as a function of the reference signal generated by the reference sensor. A comparator determines the presence of unwanted noise by calculating the Kurtosis value of the coherent unwanted noise signal.

Method And Apparatus For Extracting A Component Signal From A Composite Signal

View page
US Patent:
62755919, Aug 14, 2001
Filed:
Oct 22, 1996
Appl. No.:
8/734939
Inventors:
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Garland Lee - Dearborn MI
Larry Duane Hollingsworth - Farmington Hills MI
Christopher Robert Fuller - Virginia Beach VA
Jerome Peter Smith - Blacksburg VA
Julien Maillard - Blacksburg VA
Ricardo Anibal Burdisso - Blacksburg VA
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
A61F 1106
G10K 1116
H03B 2900
US Classification:
381 7111
Abstract:
An extracting assembly for extracting a component signal generated by a component source from a composite signal is disclosed wherein a reference sensor generates a reference signal relating to activity of the component source, a composite sensor senses the composite signal, an adaptive filter is operatively connected to the reference sensor and the composite sensor to filter the component signal from the composite signal as a function of the reference signal generated by the reference sensor, and a normalizer operatively connected to the adaptive filter for normalizing the step size of each iteration taken by the adaptive filter to minimize the time to adapt the adaptive filter to transform the reference signal into the component signal.

Method For Determining And Reproducing Noise Inducing Vibrations In A Multi-Component Assembly

View page
US Patent:
61018821, Aug 15, 2000
Filed:
Jul 8, 1998
Appl. No.:
9/111944
Inventors:
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Bill Covitz - Plymouth MI
Gary Boes - Ann Arbor MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Andrew Phillips - Plymouth MI
Christopher Robert Fuller - Virginia Beach VA
Francois Charette - Blacksburg MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G01M 700
US Classification:
73662
Abstract:
The recreation of vibration levels at certain points in a stationary vehicle interior that are representative of realistic road conditions are achieved using road measurements in conjunction with a technique known as "reciprocal filtering. " The reciprocal filtering technique consists of using an inverse transfer function, or impulse response in the time domain, between an excitation transducer and an accelerometer to calculate the excitation signal needed to recreate the vibrations measured on the road when squeak and rattle are present in a component of the vehicle. A set of excitation signals may be recorded for each component in the vehicle which is suspected of producing squeak and rattle noise. When a complaint is made that a vehicle is producing squeak and rattle, a service technician may reproduce noise by inducing vibrations through a kit having a CD player, an amplifier, a bass shaker and a CD with the set of excitation signals stored on separate tracks thereof. The bass shaker is attached, for example with two side tape, to the component suspected of producing noise, and noise inducing vibrations are played from the CD, through the CD player and amplifier, to the bass shaker.

System For Diagnosing Unexpected Noise In A Multi-Component Assembly

View page
US Patent:
61160911, Sep 12, 2000
Filed:
Jul 8, 1998
Appl. No.:
9/111680
Inventors:
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Bill Covitz - Plymouth MI
Gary Boes - Ann Arbor MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Andrew Phillips - Plymouth MI
Christopher Robert Fuller - Virginia Beach VA
Francois Charette - Blacksburg VA
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G01M 702
US Classification:
73669
Abstract:
The recreation of vibration levels at certain points in a stationary vehicle interior that are representative of realistic road conditions are achieved using road measurements in conjunction with a technique known as "reciprocal filtering. " The reciprocal filtering technique consists of using an inverse transfer function, or impulse response in the time domain, between an excitation transducer and an accelerometer to calculate the excitation signal needed to recreate the vibrations measured on the road when squeak and rattle are present in a component of the vehicle. A set of excitation signals may be recorded for each component in the vehicle which is suspected of producing squeak and rattle noise. When a complaint is made that a vehicle is producing squeak and rattle, a service technician may reproduce noise by inducing vibrations through a kit having a CD player, an amplifier, a bass shaker and a CD with the set of excitation signals stored on separate tracks thereof. The bass shaker is attached, for example with two side tape, to the component suspected of producing noise, and noise inducing vibrations are played from the CD, through the CD player and amplifier, to the bass shaker.

Method And Apparatus For Separation Of Impulsive And Non-Impulsive Components In A Signal

View page
US Patent:
62497499, Jun 19, 2001
Filed:
Aug 25, 1998
Appl. No.:
9/140072
Inventors:
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Sheau-Fang Lei - Farmington Hills MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G01R 1300
US Classification:
702 66
Abstract:
Impulsive components and non-impulsive components within any time-domain signal such as audio, video, vibration, etc. , are separated using wavelet analysis and sorting of wavelet coefficient sets according to statistical parameters of each respective coefficient set. Each entire coefficient set is either included or excluded from each respective separated component based on the statistical parameter. Thus, automatic, adaptive, flexible, and reliable separation of impulsive and non-impulsive components is achieved.

Method And Apparatus For Identifying Sound In A Composite Sound Signal

View page
US Patent:
61820180, Jan 30, 2001
Filed:
Aug 25, 1998
Appl. No.:
9/140071
Inventors:
Vy Tran - Canton MI
Sheau-Fang Lei - Farmington Hills MI
Keng D. Hsueh - West Bloomfield MI
Francois Charette - Canton MI
Assignee:
Ford Global Technologies, Inc. - Dearborn MI
International Classification:
G01R 1300
G06F 1900
US Classification:
702 66
Abstract:
Impulsive sound components in a composite sound signal are separated using wavelet analysis and sorting of wavelet coefficient sets according to statistical parameters of each respective coefficient set. Each entire coefficient set is either included or excluded from each respective separated component based on the statistical parameter. Once the impulsive sound component is isolated, it is compared with reference sound information in order to classify the sound according to its potential causes.
Keng D Hsueh from West Bloomfield, MI, age ~65 Get Report