I'm coming to this a bit late, but for those of you interested in reading research papers, and with an institutional or library subscription to the usual journal pools, I found this paper by I. Gould et al interesting and clearly-written:
Two-Electron Sensitization: A New Concept for Silver Halide Photography
Ian R. Gould, Jerome R. Lenhard, Annabel A. Muenter, Stephen A. Godleski, and Samir Farid
J. Am. Chem. Soc.,122, 11934-11943 (2000)
DOI: 10.1021/ja002274s
Dumping the DOI into google is the fastest way to find the paper.
I have *no* idea how Gould fits into the hiearchy of precedence when compared to internal Kodak research (perhaps P.E. can comment), but his group's paper is a useful read and is as freely available as any other bit of published research.
The technique uses a scavenger molecule to neutralise the positively-charged sensitiser dye before it can grab its electron back from the AgX crystal. Thus far you have only suceeded in reducing reciprocity, but two electron sensitisation goes a step further by using a scavenger which fragments once it has donated an electron to the dye. The clever bit is to make one of the fragments a strong enough reducing agent that it can donate *another* electron to the AgX.
It sounds like black magic, but it is really only a reflection of the fact that many organic molecules in solution have ionisation energies in the infra-red, so if you control where the energy goes, you can ionise two of them with a single photon of visible light.
In general, there is a lot of fundamental research into electronic transfer between wide-band-gap crystals like AgX and organic molecules, but much of it is motivated by applications like solar cells where you don't want the dye molecule to be destroyed or rendered inactive after one absorbtion event. That cuts out the known pathways to 2-electron sensitisation, although the concept has been discussed and people would love to find a working solution - in principle it wouldn't be impossible if you could only find the right combinations of reversible reactions. "Dye sensitised solar cells" is a useful search term if you want the nitty-gritty: it turns up research in engineering, surface science, synchrotron-based research, solid-state physics, organic and physical chemistry and environmental sciences. Still a very hot topic, if not exactly photography.