Nvidia · Filed Dec 9, 2024 · Published Jun 11, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Nvidia Patents an AI That Answers Questions During Your Live Meetings

Picture asking a question mid-meeting and getting a researched, context-aware answer before the conversation moves on. That's the core idea behind Nvidia's latest AI patent for live meetings.

Nvidia Patent: AI Assistant for Live Meeting Insights — figure from US 2026/0163752 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0163752 A1
Applicant NVIDIA Corporation
Filing date Dec 9, 2024
Publication date Jun 11, 2026
Inventors Shivi MISHRA, Amey KULKARNI, Mayank PANDEY, Priyanshu SHARMA, Prasun KUMAR, Harshraj RAO
CPC classification 709/204
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner BOUTAH, ALINA A (Art Unit 2458)
Status Non Final Action Mailed (Mar 23, 2026)
Document 20 claims

What Nvidia's live-meeting AI actually does for you

Imagine you're in a video call and someone asks, "What did we decide about this project last quarter?" Normally, someone scrambles to find old notes or the question just gets punted. Nvidia's patent describes an AI system that listens to your meeting in real time and automatically answers questions like that the moment they're asked.

The system pulls from three sources at once: what's being said right now in the meeting, notes and transcripts from past meetings, and broader company documents or data. It feeds all of that into a large language model — the same kind of AI that powers chatbots — to produce a relevant answer that shows up on screen during the call.

The AI can do more than just answer questions. It can also offer guidance on how the meeting itself should flow — think automated nudges like "you're running over time on this agenda item" or suggestions for next steps. It's essentially a real-time AI co-facilitator sitting in on every call.

How the system pulls context and generates answers mid-meeting

The patent describes a pipeline that activates whenever a "management event" occurs during a live meeting — which can be an explicit question from a participant or a trigger the system detects automatically (like a long silence or a topic shift).

Once triggered, the system identifies contextual data relevant to that moment. It searches across three layers:

  • Live meeting data — the current transcript or audio stream
  • Prior meeting data — transcripts, summaries, or action items from previous sessions
  • Organizational data — internal documents, wikis, or databases the company has made available

That combined context is passed to a generative language model — which could be a large language model (LLM, like GPT-style text AI), a vision-language model (VLM, which can also process images or slides), or a multimodal model (MMLM, which handles text, audio, and video together). The model generates either an inquiry response (a direct answer) or an orchestration directive (guidance for managing the meeting's flow).

The output is surfaced through a user interface visible to participants during the live session — not as a follow-up summary, but in the moment.

What this means for AI-powered workplace software

Most AI meeting tools today work after the call ends — they transcribe, summarize, and send you a recap. Nvidia's patent targets the gap inside the meeting itself, where decisions actually get made and questions go unanswered. If this works as described, it could meaningfully reduce the time wasted re-litigating things that were already decided or chasing down information mid-discussion.

Nvidia already sells enterprise AI infrastructure, and a system like this would pair naturally with its existing push into AI-powered workplace and collaboration tools. The real question is whether this becomes an Nvidia-branded product or a capability licensed to videoconferencing platforms — the patent doesn't say, but either path puts Nvidia closer to the enterprise software layer it's been quietly building toward.

Editorial take

This is a genuinely useful idea, and the "real-time" angle is what separates it from the crowded post-meeting AI summary market. Whether Nvidia ships this as its own product or sells the underlying tech to meeting platforms, it's a clear signal that the company is serious about the enterprise software layer — not just selling the chips that run everyone else's AI.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.