Ex Parte Hale et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 22, 201712902998 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 22, 2017) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 12/902,998 10/12/2010 Eric Lawrence Hale 02580 - P0262C 3087 131672 7590 08/22/2017 Whitmyer IP Group LLC 600 Summer Street 3rd Floor Stamford, CT 06901 EXAMINER WOO, JAE KYUN ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3779 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/22/2017 PAPER Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte ERIC LAWRENCE HALE, HANS DAVID HOEG, and NATHAN JON SCHARA ____________________ Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 Technology Center 3700 ____________________ Before JOHN C. KERINS, WILLIAM A. CAPP, and BRENT M. DOUGAL, Administrative Patent Judges. KERINS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Eric Lawrence Hale et al. (Appellants) appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from a final rejection of claims 1–17. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). An oral hearing was conducted on July 20, 2017, with Victor P. Lin appearing on behalf of Appellants. We AFFIRM. Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 2 THE INVENTION Appellants’ invention is directed to a method for helping a user predict rapid or sudden image rotation in a gravity leveled endoscopic imaging system. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative: 1. A method for helping a user predict rapid or sudden image rotation in a gravity leveled endoscopic imaging system, the method comprising: monitoring the attitude of the view vector of an endoscope having a longitudinal axis and a view vector angle that varies relative to the longitudinal axis, said monitoring comprising accounting for endoscope pitch, endoscope roll, and view vector angle relative to the longitudinal axis; specifying a neighborhood of a viewing singularity; and displaying a graphical representation of said view vector and a graphical representation of said neighborhood. REJECTIONS The Examiner has rejected: (i) claims 1, 2, 4–8, 10, and 12–16 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Chatenever (US 2002/0161280 A1, published Oct. 31, 2002) in view of Hale (US 2002/0099263 A1, published July 25, 2002) and Shahidi (US 2003/0032878, published Feb. 13, 2003); (ii) claims 3 and 11 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Chatenever in view of Hale, Shahidi, and Banik (US 7,479,106 B2, issued Jan. 20, 2009); and Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 3 (iii) claims 9 and 17 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Chatenever in view of Hale, Shahidi, and Clayton (US 6,434,507 B1, issued Aug. 13, 2002). OPINION Claims 1, 2, 4–8, 10, and 12–16--Chatenever/Hale/Shahidi Appellants present arguments directed to both independent claims 1 and 10. Appeal Br. 4–10. Appellants present no arguments for the separate patentability of dependent claims 2, 4–8, and 12–16 that are also subject to this rejection. Accordingly, we take claim 1 as representative, and claims 2, 4–8, 10, and 12–16 stand or fall with claim 1. The Examiner finds that Chatenever discloses the view vector attitude monitoring and viewing singularity neighborhood specification steps set forth in claim 1. Final Act. 2 (citing Chatenever, paras. 86, 89, Fig. 16). The Examiner finds that Chatenever lacks disclosure of an endoscope having a view vector angle that varies relative to the longitudinal axis of the endoscope. Id. at 2–3. The Examiner relies on Hale as disclosing an endoscope with a variable view vector angle, and reasons that it would have been obvious to employ such an endoscope in conjunction with the method steps disclosed in Chatenever, in order to provide the versatility of changing the view vector without moving the endoscope within the cavity. Id. at 3. The Examiner further recognizes that the combined disclosures of Chatenever and Hale fail to disclose the step of displaying a graphical representation of the view vector attitude and of the viewing singularity neighborhood. Final Act. 3–4. The Examiner cites to Shahidi as disclosing the desirability of providing to an endoscope user a graphical representation Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 4 that enables the user to observe physical relationships between the endoscope, the subject (patient), and the endoscope field of view. Id. at 4. The Examiner takes the position that it would have thus been obvious to employ a graphical representation of a view vector of the endoscope, in order to provide a display of relevant information about the view vector relative to the endoscope and the patient. Id. The Examiner notes that Shahidi does not provide for a graphical representation of a viewing singularity neighborhood, but concludes that it would have been obvious to include that in a display, in view of Chatenever’s disclosure of the significance of the position of singularities relative to the view vector and the significance of there being a neighborhood of the singularity in which rotational control of an image taken by the endoscope becomes unstable. Id. at 4–5 (citing Chatenever, para. 89). Appellants first argue that the cited references “have nothing to do with helping a user predict rapid or sudden image rotation in a gravity leveled endoscopic imaging system.” Appeal Br. 5. Appellants, after briefly providing their characterizations as to what the references are purportedly directed to, repeat that “the cited references are not relevant to the claimed method for helping a user predict rapid or sudden image rotation in a gravity leveled endoscopic imaging system or to viewing singularities.” Id. at 6–7. The references, according to Appellants, would never have motivated one of ordinary skill in the art to address this issue in any manner. Id. at 7. To the extent that Appellants intend these arguments to serve as assertions that the references are directed to nonanalogous art, they miss the mark. Appellants acknowledge that the three references “each relate generally to endoscopic surgery and imaging in such circumstances.” Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 5 Appeal Br. 7. As such, the references, in accordance with Appellants’ own words, are directed to subject matter that is in the same field of endeavor as Appellants’ invention. Moreover, as to the specifics of problems with rapid or sudden image rotation, Appellants’ statement that Chatenever “does not disclose or suggest that it relates in any way to rapid or sudden image rotation” (Appeal Br. 6) is belied by paragraphs 87–89 of Chatenever that specifically address image rotation instabilities occurring when the endoscope view vector “becomes closer to the direction of gravity.” Chatenever, paras. 87–89. Appellants themselves acknowledge that Chatenever, as well as other prior art have, as objects of their inventions, “provid[ing] schemes which can maintain the proper upright gravity-leveled orientation of the endoscopic image regardless of how the endoscope is being manipulated.” Spec. p. 2–3 (identifying Chatenever as U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/093,650). As such, Appellants’ arguments addressing the alleged irrelevance of the references cited by the Examiner do not apprise us of error in the Examiner’s rejection. Appellants next argue that the evidence does not support a conclusion that it would have been obvious to display a graphical representation of a neighborhood of a viewing singularity. Appeal Br. 7. Appellants maintain, in this regard, that Chatenever “does not disclose any neighborhood of a viewing singularity.” Id. Appellants characterize Figure 16 of Chatenever as showing only “the relationship between the angular regions in which different control signals are used,” and, “at most, [show] a neighborhood in which accelerometers experience reduced performance.” Id. Appellants again miss the mark in arguing that “Chatenever does not disclose or even Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 6 suggest that the accelerometer performance issue it discusses is related to rapid or sudden image rotation or to a viewing singularity,” and that the angular regions in Figure 16 are not disclosed as relating in any way to rapid or sudden image rotation. Id. At the outset, we fail to see any difference between Appellants’ term “viewing singularity” and Chatenever’s discussion of a “y-axis” as being coincident with the direction of gravity. Chatenever, para. 48. In addition, the discussion that, as the camera head (and its associated view vector) approach perpendicularity or being parallel to the Y axis and the force of gravity, there is a spatial angle at which the rotation of the image becomes unstable, which, to a person of ordinary skill in the art, would mean that the image would be subject to rapid or sudden rotation, is indicative that there is a neighborhood surrounding the viewing singularity within which image instability may occur.1 Chatenever, paras. 87–89 (discussing that the instability is as a result of an accelerometer no longer being able to output a valid signal adequate for rotational control). Further, Chatenever leaves virtually no doubt that it is not merely a coincidence that the purported “neighborhood in which accelerometers experience reduced performance,” according to Appellants characterization of Figure 16 of Chatenever, is effectively the same thing as a neighborhood of a viewing singularity, the singularity being an axis indicating, or parallel to, the direction of the force of gravity. Appellants’ attempt to pigeonhole the Chatenever teachings into a consideration as to how to overcome performance issues experienced with 1 Chatenever refers to this as an “annular region ha[ving] a conical shape . . . defined by the solid angle α.” Chatenever, para. 89, Fig. 16. Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 7 accelerometers in the neighborhood of a singularity, i.e., in a conical region surrounding an axis of, or parallel to, the force of gravity, fails to consider the more far-reaching teachings of the reference to persons of ordinary skill in the art. Appellants additionally argue that there is nothing in Chatenever that suggests that the information conveyed by Figure 16 thereof, would be relevant to a user of the Chatenever device. Appeal Br. 8. This argument fails to take into account that the Examiner relies on Shahidi for the teaching that graphical representations or displays of information are useful in aiding the user to determine the physical relationships between the endoscope, the patient, and the field of view of the endoscope. Final Act. 4. The Examiner’s position is that this teaching would have led one of ordinary skill in the art to include the information from Figure 16 of Chatenever, letting a user know when the view vector is approaching a neighborhood of a viewing singularity. Appellants further maintain, in this regard, that “evidence that it was known that an accelerometer will perform poorly in a vertical orientation is NOT evidence that it would be valuable to display a neighborhood of a viewing singularity.” Appeal Br. 9. However, this ignores that persons of ordinary skill in the art would understand that this poor performance is as a result of being in a region approaching the vertical, in the direction of gravitational force, i.e., in a neighborhood of a viewing singularity, where the accelerometer cannot detect gravity. Cf., Chatenever, para. 88 (valid rotational control signal only when accelerometer can detect gravity). In Appellants’ words, this vertical position has no unique upright image orientation, a situation similar to standing on the North Pole and having to Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 8 define what direction is South. Spec., para. 5. Since this phenomenon is not unique to accelerometer-based sensors, the Chatenever graphic would be useful regardless as to how the orientation of the view vector is determined. Appellants additionally maintain that nothing in Hale nor Shahidi would have motivated a person of ordinary skill in the art to display Chatenever’s graphical representation in Figure 16 to a user of an endoscope. Appeal Br. 9. Hale is not relied on in this context, and Appellants argue with respect to Shahidi that the specific control signal arrangements employed in Chatenever would not have any relevance to a user. Id. The Examiner, however, does not propose to incorporate the specifics of the control signal arrangement of Chatenever in the Shahidi system, and instead concludes that it would have been obvious to include, in the Chatenever system, a display constituting a graphical representation of the neighborhood of the viewing singularity neighborhood and of the view vector. Appellants, in the Reply Brief, respond to certain positions taken by the Examiner that construe the claimed “user” to include a person programming the Chatenever endoscope system. Reply Br. 2–3; Ans. 3. We agree with Appellants that this is an unreasonably broad interpretation as to who would constitute a user in the context of the claims. Notwithstanding, we are not apprised of Examiner error in the initially- stated basis for rejecting the claims over a combination of the teachings of Chatenever, Hale, and Shahidi. The rejection of claim 1 is therefore sustained. Claims 2, 4–8, 10, and 12–16 stand or fall with claim 1. Appeal 2015-004835 Application 12/902,998 9 Claims 3 and 11--Chatenever/Hale/Shahidi/Banik Appellants do not proffer any arguments for the separate patentability of these claims, and rely on those arguments advanced with respect to claims 1 and 10. Appeal Br. 10. For the reasons presented above, we are not apprised of error in the Examiner’s position, and the rejection of claims 3 and 11 is sustained. Claims 9 and 17--Chatenever/Hale/Shahidi/Clayton Appellants do not proffer any arguments for the separate patentability of these claims, and rely on those arguments advanced with respect to claims 1 and 10. Appeal Br. 10. For the reasons presented above, we are not apprised of error in the Examiner’s position, and the rejection of claims 9 and 17 is sustained. DECISION The rejections of claims 1–17 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) are affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). AFFIRMED Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation