Ex Parte Tonami et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardApr 15, 201612865498 (P.T.A.B. Apr. 15, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/865,498 07/30/2010 74384 7590 Cheng Law Group, PLLC 1133 13th St. N.W. Suite C2 Washington, DC 20005 04/18/2016 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Hiromichi Tonami 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. SUT-0489 3338 EXAMINER KELLY, RAFFERTY D ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2876 MAILDATE DELIVERY MODE 04/18/2016 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 HIROMICHI TONAMI, TOMOAKI TSUDA, and JUNICHI OHI Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 Technology Center 2800 Before CHUNG K. PAK, JAMES C. HOUSEL, and WESLEY B. DERRICK, Administrative Patent Judges. DERRICK, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner's final rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) of claims 1-3, 6, 7, 11, and 12 over Tsuda 1 and rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) of claims 4, 5, 9, and 10 over Tsuda and Duclos2 and claims 8 and 13 over Tsuda and Kojima. 3 We have jurisdiction pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6. We REVERSE. 1 Tsuda et al., A Four-Layer Depth of Interaction Detector Block for Small Animal PET, 51 IEEE Trans. Nuclear Sci. 2537--42. 2 Duclos et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,298,113 Bl, issued October 2, 2001. 3 Kojima et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,965,661 B2, issued November 15, 2005. Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Appellants' invention relates to a radiation detector including a scintillation counter crystal layer formed of scintillation counter crystals formed in an array and first and second reflector frames where each crystal is inserted through the first and second reflector frame. Spec. Abstract. The Specification describes the invention as an improvement over prior art radiation detectors with multilevel detector blocks in that by using crystals that extend through multiple reflector frames the number of crystals required is reduced over the analogous prior art detectors in which crystals do not span more than a single reflector frame. See, e.g., Spec. 7-12. Independent claim 1 is directed to a radiation detector including a scintillation counter crystal layer in which each crystal is inserted through a first and second reflector frame. Claim 1. Independent claim 3 is directed to a radiation detector including a scintillation counter crystal layer in which each crystal is inserted through a first, second, third, and fourth reflector frame. Claim 3. Claim 1 reproduced from the Appeal Brief with added emphasis is illustrative: 1. A radiation detector comprising a scintillator formed of two or more scintillation counter crystals to convert radiation emitted from a radiation source into fluorescence, and a fluorescence detection device to detect fluorescence from the scintillator, the radiation detector comprising a first reflector frame in which two or more first reflectors that extend along a first direction while being arranged in a second direction perpendicular to the first direction and two or more second reflectors that extend along the second direction while being arranged in the first direction are arranged in a lattice pattern, and a second reflector frame having two or more reflectors arranged in a lattice pattern as well as the first reflector frame, 2 Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 the first reflector frame and the second reflector frame being laminated along a third direction that is perpendicular to the first direction and the second direction, each of the scintillation counter crystals being inserted in the third direction through the first reflector frame and the second reflector frame, whereby two or more scintillation counter crystals are arranged in the first direction and the second direction to form a first scintillation counter crystal layer, and a position of the first reflector frame provided in the first scintillation counter crystal layer differing from a position of the second reflector frame provided in the first scintillation counter crystal layer. Appeal Brief ("App. Br."), 19. DISCUSSION We have reviewed the Examiner's rejections in light of Appellants' arguments that the Examiner has erred. 4 As highlighted in Appellants' Appeal and Reply Briefs, we find that the Examiner erred in interpreting the recited layer-the "scintillation counter cP;stal layer"-to be merely a layer of scintillation counter crystals (Ans. 10) rather than the specific structure set forth and defined in independent claims 1 and 3. This issue is dispositive as to all rejections. It follows, therefore, that we reverse the Examiner's rejections of claims 1-13. We begin our analysis by determining the scope and meaning of the claims, giving claim terms the broadest reasonable interpretation consistent with the Specification as they would be interpreted by one of ordinary skill 4 We refer to the Final Office Action (mailed April 9, 2013, "Final Act."), the Appeal Brief (filed November 12, 2013), the Examiner's Answer (mailed March 18, 2014, "Ans."), and the Reply Brief (filed May 17, 2014, "Reply Br."). 3 Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 in the art. See, e.g., In re NTP, Inc., 654 F.3d 1279, 1288 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (citing In re Suitco Swface, Inc., 603 F.3d 1255, 1259 (Fed. Cir. 2010)). In doing so, we tum first to the claims themselves. See, e.g., Rapoport v. Dement, 254 F.3d 1053, 1059 (Fed. Cir. 2001). As highlighted by Appellants' arguments (App. Br. 6-7, 9; Reply Br. 1-3), the claimed "scintillation counter crystal layer" is not merely a layer of scintillation counter crystals, but is instead the structure formed where "each of the scintillation counter crystals [is] inserted ... through the first reflector frame and the second reflector frame" such that the "layer" according to claim 1 includes the first and second reflector frames as "the first reflector frame [is] provided in the first scintillation counter crystal layer" and "the second reflector frame [is] provided in the first scintillation counter crystal layer." Claim 1. In other words, each of the scintillation counter crystals span the region defined by both the first reflector frame and the second reflector frame. Similarly, in claim 3 "each of the scintillation counter crystals is inserted ... through the first reflector frame, the second reflector frame, the third reflector frame, and the fourth reflector frame ... to form a scintillation counter crystal layer." Claim 3 (emphasis added). We further determine the claim's further limitation as to "an inserting position in the scintillation counter crystal layer differing from one another in the first reflector frame, the second reflector frame, the third reflector frame, and the fourth reflector frame" (Claim 3) indicates that each of the four reflector frames is structure included in the recited scintillation counter crystal layer such that, properly construed, the claim requires the scintillation counter crystals span the region defined by the four recited reflector frames. 4 Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 Turning to the rejections, the Examiner relies on "layer" as meaning "an amount of something that is spread over an area" (Ans. 10, citing the Merriam-Webster dictionary) and contends "each crystal [of Tsuda] is inserted through the reflector frames" (Ans. 10, citing Tsuda Fig. 4). In doing so, the Examiner explicitly considers Tsuda's disclosed 1st and 2nd layers to be a "layer" and Tsuda's disclosed 3rd and 4th layers to be another "layer." Ans. 10 (citing Tsuda Fig. 4). The Examiner fails, however, to explain how Tsuda's crystals spanning no more than one of the four disclosed layers (see Ans. 10, citing Tsuda Fig. 4) meet the limitation of claim 1 that "each of the scintillation counter crystals" extends through both first and second reflector frames (corresponding to Tsuda's 1st and 2nd or 3rd and 4th layers) or of claim 3 that "each of the scintillation counter crystals" extends "through the first reflector frame, the second reflector frame, the third reflector frame, and the fourth reflector frame" (emphasis added). Furthermore, the Examiner provides insufficient basis or reasoning why Tsuda could be considered to disclose scintillation counter crystals other than those constrained to a single one of Tsuda's four layers. App. Br., generally; Reply Br., generally. On this record, therefore, we are constrained to reverse the Examiner's anticipation rejection. A reference is only anticipatory when it discloses, whether explicitly or inherently, each and every element of the claimed invention arranged or combined in the same way as the claim. See, e.g., In re Gleave, 560 F.3d 1331, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2009). As to the Examiner's obviousness rejections, the Examiner relies on Tsuda's four disclosed layers as applied in the anticipation rejection. Final Act. 7-10; Ans. 12. Having so relied on Tsuda, the Examiner does not 5 Appeal2014-006643 Application 12/865,498 provide sufficient reasoning or explanation why one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention would have modified Tsuda as required to provide the scintillation counter crystal layer according to the claims. We will not tum to impermissible speculation or unfounded assumptions or rationales to cure the deficiencies in the rejections before us. In re Warner, 379 F.2d 1011, 1017 (CCPA 1967). We likewise decline to scour the record in the first instance for facts that might support the rejection, as our primary role is review, not examination de nova. It follows that we will also reverse the obviousness rejections. CONCLUSION The Examiner's rejections of claims 1-13 are REVERSED. REVERSED 6 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation