Ex Parte Isogai et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMar 28, 201611986702 (P.T.A.B. Mar. 28, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 111986,702 11/26/2007 27572 7590 03/30/2016 HARNESS, DICKEY & PIERCE, PLC P.O. BOX 828 BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MI 48303 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Akira Isogai 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. 4041P-000096 3848 EXAMINER MUSTAFA, IMRAN K ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3663 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 03/30/2016 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): troydocketing@hdp.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte AK.IRA ISOGAI and MASAO OOOKA Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 1 Technology Center 3600 Before CHARLES N. GREENHUT, THOMAS F. SMEGAL, and LISA M. GUIJT, Administrative Patent Judges. SMEGAL, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEivIENT OF THE CASE Akira Isogai and Masao Oooka (Appellants) seek our review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 of the Examiner's Final Rejection2 of claims 3 and 5-18 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Tellis (US 2003/0135318 Al, pub. July 17, 2003), Shirai (US 5,710,565, iss. Jan. 20, 1998) and Grimm (US 2007/0150196 Al, pub. June 28, 2007). 3 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b ). 1 According to Appellants, the real party in interest is Denso Corporation. Appeal Br. 1. 2 The Final Action also rejected claim 16 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph, as failing to comply with the written description requirement. Final Act. 2. This rejection, however, was withdrawn. See Ans. 4. 3 Claims 1, 2, and 4 were canceled. Appeal Br. 17, Claims App. Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 We REVERSE. CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Claim 16, the sole independent claim, is reproduced below and illustrates the claimed subject matter. 16. A cruise control system installed in a system vehicle, the cruise control system comprising: a monitoring unit monitoring a predetermined region in front of the system vehicle when the system vehicle is located on a lane of a road to detect a position and a speed of at least one object; an instruction input unit allowing a driver of the system vehicle to input an instruction indicating that a stopped vehicle or a cutting vehicle is present in front of the system vehicle; and a target determining unit executing a determination of a target for adjusting an interval of the system vehicle with respect to the target, wherein the target determining unit has a first condition and a second condition, the first condition representing that the at least one object has a same-lane probability higher than a preset value, the second condition representing that the at least one object is determined to approach toward the system vehicle based on a shift amount of lateral position of the at least one object, the target detecting unit being configured to: determine, based on the position and speed of the at least one object, whether the at least one object meets the first condition to determine whether the at least one object is a forward vehicle as the target; and when the instruction is input to the instruction input unit by the driver, add the second condition to the first condition to thereby determine, based on the position and speed of the at least one object, whether the at least one object meets one of the first condition and the second condition to determine whether the at least one object is, as the target, one of the 2 Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 forward vehicle and a cutting vehicle cutting into the same lane as the system vehicle. 4 ANALYSIS Obviousness of Claims 3 and 5-18 over Tellis, Shirai, and Grimm We are persuaded by Appellants' arguments that the Examiner fails to establish a prima facie showing of obviousness in rejecting claims 3 and 5- 18 over Tellis, Shirai, and Grimm. See Appeal Br. 10-14; see also Reply Br. 2-5. While relying on Tellis for various limitations of a cruise control system installed in a system vehicle, the Examiner looks to Shirai for teaching "an instruction input unit allowing a driver of the system vehicle to input an instruction indicating that a stopped vehicle or a cutting [in] vehicle is present in front of the system vehicle," as recited by claim 16. Final Act. 4 (citing Shirai, col. 20, 1. 62---col. 21, 1. 16). The Examiner reasons that "[ c ]learly \vhen a vehicle is detected \vhether it is a cut in vehicle or a 4 If there is further prosecution of this application, the Examiner may wish to consider whether claim 16 should be rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, as being indefinite for failure to particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter which Appellants regard as the invention, in reciting the italicized portion of claim 16. Specifically, it is unclear how the "at least one object" can be determined to meet either the first or second condition alone (i.e., either being determined to have a same-lane probability higher than a preset value or being determined to be an approaching vehicle) by adding the second condition to the first condition, based on the position and speed of the object. It is further unclear how the first and second conditions, which appear to be assigned yes or no values (i.e., yes, the object has a same-lane probability higher than the preset value, or no, the object is determined not to be an approaching vehicle), are added together. 3 Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 stopped vehicle the driver will recognize it and will operate either a brake or a coast switch which will allow the vehicle to be slowed down." Id. (emphasis removed). The Examiner also points out that "the coasting operation [in Shirai] is a manual input by the driver [where the driver recognizes] a cutting in vehicle or a stopped vehicle in front of the vehicle and manually operates the switch to slow the vehicle down in order to prevent a collision from occurring," and that "when the driver performs a resume operation using resuming switch 12c in Figure 1 of Shirai[,] a new target vehicle (whether [or not] it was a cutting in vehicle) is selected and the adaptive cruise control is resumed accordingly with the newly selected target vehicle." Id. at 6. Appellants first contend that what is disclosed by Shirai is a "typical prior art 'coast' command," which "is clearly not the same as having the target detecting unit determine whether the at least one object is, as the target, one of the forward vehicle and the cutting vehicle" but "is simply a manual adjustment made by the driver and is not an instruction indicating that a stopped vehicle or a cutting vehicle is present." Appeal Br. 10. Appellants also point out that Shirai merely discloses that the driver's coast operation is to decrease the speed Vn of the system vehicle to be matched with the target vehicle speed V m, and fails to disclose or suggest that the coast operation in Shirai is used to input an instruction indicating that a stopped vehicle or a cutting vehicle is present in front of the system vehicle. Id. (emphasis omitted). Appellants continue by asserting that because "a skilled person in the art knows well that, if a driver of the system vehicle wants to slow the 4 Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 system vehicle down in the cruise control, the driver instructs a coast operation"' Id. at 11 (emphasis omitted). Appellants also contend that because Shirai merely teaches a coast operation as an instruction to slow the vehicle down, the Examiner's interpretation of the coast operation, which means that the driver recognizes [] a cutting in a vehicle or a stopped vehicle in front of the vehicle, would be based on impermissible hindsight reasoning. Id. Appellants also argue that, as recited by claim 16, "even if a vehicle tries to cut in front of the system vehicle from a position close to the system vehicle, the driver of the system vehicle can detect the cut-in of the vehicle at an early stage of cut-in, and inputs through the instruction input unit an instruction indicating that the cut in vehicle is present in front of the vehicle." Id. at 12 (emphasis omitted). The Examiner responds that Tellis "discloses a fully automatic process in that the system will not require a driver to decelerate the vehicle manually through an instruction input but rather as stated in Paragraph 44 the system automatically reduces the vehicle velocity of the host vehicle to let the cut-in vehicle in front of the host vehicle and then further maintain[ s] a distance between the vehicles[,] and that Shirai teaches [] a manual input by the driver (coast operation) in which the driver . . . has the ability to determine that a vehicle is cutting in and thus slow down the speed of the vehicle via the coast operation in order to let the cut-in vehicle in front of them. Ans. 10. Appellants respond that "it may be true that Shirai discloses a coast operation for decreasing the speed of a vehicle," but "Shirai fails to disclose or suggest such a coast operation is performed for sending information about 5 Appeal2013---010893 Application 11/986, 702 the driver recognizing a cutting vehicle in front of the system vehicle." Reply Br. 2-3. Appellants also explain that "[a]s described on page 21, line 6 to page 23, line 20, control switch 21 is more than a coast operation switch," because"[ w ]hen wanting to send the stopped-vehicle selection instruction or the cut-in vehicle selection instruction to the cruise control, control switch 21 is lowered and is kept lowered for a predetermined period oftime." Id. at4. We are persuaded by Appellants that the Examiner has failed to support the finding that Shirai teaches an instruction input unit allowing a driver of the system vehicle to input a specific instruction indicating that a stopped vehicle or a cutting vehicle is present in front of the system vehicle, as required by claim 16. In other words, we agree with Appellants that Shirai' s instruction input, which allows manual operation by a driver of a coast switch for any reason, does not disclose an instruction input unit that allows the driver to particularly inform the system as to whether a stopped vehicle or a cutting vehicle is present in front of the system, such that the system executes a determination based on the information. Id. at 5. For the foregoing reasons, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claims 3 and 5-18 over Tellis, Shirai, and Grimm. DECISION The decision of the Examiner to reject claims 3 and 5-18 is REVERSED. REVERSED 6 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation