Ex Parte Stonefield et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMay 2, 201611895346 (P.T.A.B. May. 2, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 111895,346 08/24/2007 45436 7590 05/04/2016 DEAN D, SMALL THE SMALL PA TENT LAW GROUP LLC 225 S. MERAMEC, STE. 725T ST. LOUIS, MO 63105 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Andrew David Stonefield 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. 225928 (553-1353) 2579 EXAMINER MEHTA, PARIKHA SOLANKI ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER OPQA NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 05/04/2016 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): Docket@splglaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte ANDREW DAVID STONEFIELD, LIU LANPING, and AURELIE RONCAGLIONI Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Technology Center 3700 Before DONALD E. ADAMS, JEFFREY N. FREDMAN, and JACQUELINE T. HARLOW, Administrative Patent Judges. PER CURIAM DECISION ON APPEAL This is an appeal 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 134 involving claims to a diagnostic medical imaging device having a protective facade. The Examiner rejected the claims on the grounds of indefiniteness and obviousness. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm-in-part. 1 Appellants identify the Real Party in Interest as General Electric Company (see App. Br. 3). Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Statement of the Case Background Appellants' invention "relates generally to diagnostic imaging devices, and more particularly, to devices and apparatus that facilitate the cleaning and disinfecting of diagnostic imaging devices" (Spec. i-f 1 ). The Claims Claims 22---60 are on appeal. Independent claim 22 is representative and reads as follows (emphasis added): 1. A diagnostic medical imaging device comprising: a display screen mounted in an enclosure and configured for displaying medical images; a user interface mounted in the enclosure adjacent the display screen and including at least one user input that is operable without moving parts; and the enclosure including a one-piece non-flexible facade covering the display screen and the user input, wherein the facade is transparent over at least a portion of the display screen and configured such that the at least one user input is operable by a user. The Issues A. The Examiner rejected claims 25 and 40 under 35 U.S.C. § 112 as being indefinite (Ans. 2). B. The Examiner rejected claims 22---60 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Poland2 and Richardson3 (Ans. 2--4). 2 Poland, US 2009/0043195 Al, published Feb. 12, 2009. 3 Richardson et al., US 7,907,394 B2, issued Mar. 15, 2011. 2 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 A. 35 U.S. C. § 112, second paragraph Appellants do not argue this rejection (see Ans. 9). We therefore summarily affirm the indefiniteness rejection based upon the Examiner's explanation and reasoning (Ans. 2). See In re Berger, 279 F.3d 975, 984 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (in which the Board affirmed an uncontested rejection of claims under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, and on appeal the Federal Circuit affirmed the Board's decision and found that the appellant had waived his right to contest the indefiniteness rejection by not presenting arguments as to error in the rejection on appeal to the Board). B. 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Poland and Richardson The Examiner finds that Poland teaches a tablet (i-f 31, wireless portable display device) for viewing ultrasound images, the tablet comprising a rectangular display 20 configured for displaying ultrasound images (i-f 33), and a user interface 18 extending along at least two edges of the display screen which is operable without moving parts, the interface comprising a capacitive switch (i-f 31 ). (Ans. 3). The Examiner concludes that it would have been obvious "to modify the system of Poland (' 195) to include the protective arrangement of Richardson ('394), at least to protect the ultrasound tablet from liquid and mechanical damage, which would thereby yield the present invention" (id.). The issue with respect to this rejection is: Does the evidence of record support the Examiner's conclusion that Poland and Richardson render the claims prima facie obvious? 3 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Findings of Fact 1. Poland teaches a [u]ser interface for providing user control over device functions of an ultrasound imaging system (10) [that] includes a touchscreen (18) and activation areas (22, 24, 26) defined thereon simultaneous images. Each activation area (22, 24, 26) has a unique assigned function relating to processing of the ultrasound images with an indication of the function being displayed on the activation area (22, 24, 26). A processor (16) is coupled to the touchscreen (18) for detecting a touch on the activation areas (22, 24, 26) and performing the function associated with each activation area (22, 24, 26) upon being touched. In this manner, all UI controls can be implemented as virtual controls by assigning the function of each control to an activation area (22, 24, 26) so that the user can simply touch the activation area and effect the desired control. (Poland Abstract; see also Ans. 3.) 2. Figure 2 of Poland is reproduced below: ~::~ .. . JL. ~ ~ .... .,._ ......... _ ................ ., ................................................................................ ., ................ ~~~ .. ~:~::J.:lli~9--.............. ~J ~ l i 1~·~·~] r·~·~] r·~_::] i I L:::::::::::::. _____________ ~:==-~~=--·J FIG. 2 4 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Figure 2 shows a sample of the layout of virtual controls on the touchscreen 18 during operation of the ultrasound imaging system 10. The touchscreen 18 displays in the available display area or visual field 20 either the ultrasound images in their entirety or the ultrasound images along with one or more superimposed activation areas 22, 24, 26 in a portion of the visual field 20. Activation areas 22, 24, 26 represent the usual controls of the ultrasound imaging system 10 which are implemented as on- screen virtual devices, including such hard UI controls as keys, buttons, trackball, and TGC potentiometers. (Poland i-f 33; see also Ans. 3.) 3. Figure 13A of Richardson is reproduced below: t.}\TCJi FIG.13A Figure 13A shows a protective enclosure for an electronic device having a touch screen comprising: a shell that is capable of enclosing and substantially surrounding the electronic device, the electronic device being a separate unit from the protective enclosure, the electronic device being insertable in and removable from the protective enclosure by hand, the shell being substantially 5 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 watertight, substantially rigid and substantially crush- resistant; a protective membrane attached to the shell so that the protective membrane is disposed over the touch screen of the electronic device when the electronic device is enclosed in the shell, the protective membrane being sufficiently thin to allow tactile inputs on a front side of the protective membrane to be communicated to the touch screen through the protective membrane, ... (Richardson 2:67-3:14; see also Ans. 3.) 4. Richardson teaches A protective enclosure for a personal electronic device having a shell that is capable of enclosing and substantially surrounding the electronic device disposed to make the shell substantially watertight, substantially rigid and substantially crush-resistant. The enclosure has a transparent protective membrane that is attached to the shell so that the protective membrane is positioned over the touch screen of the electronic device when the electronic device is enclosed in the shell. (Richardson Abstract; see also Ans. 3.) 5. Richardson teaches that "[t]he membrane ... is constructed by thermoforming a sheet of thin plastic," and that "[t]he plastic is selected to be thin enough that the deformation of a stylus conducts the touch to the touch screen, but thick enough to have enough rigidity that the stylus does not catch and rip the membrane" (Richardson 5:45-50; see also Ans. 3). Principles of Law "The combination of familiar elements according to known methods is likely to be obvious when it does no more than yield predictable results." KSR!nt'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 416 (2007). "If a person of ordinary skill can implement a predictable variation, § 103 likely bars its patentability." Id. at 417. 6 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Analysis We adopt the Examiner's findings and agree that claims 22, 44, and 58 are obvious over Poland and Richardson. We address Appellants' arguments below. Appellants contend that Poland makes clear that element 20 is the visual field of the touchscreen 18. The visual field 20 is the portion of the touchscreen 18 wherein [the] display is provided. Accordingly, there cannot be a user interface mounted in an enclosure adjacent the display screen as the visual field 20 is the display portion of the touchscreen 18. Accordingly, the visual field 20 is not mounted in an enclosure adjacent to the touchscreen 18. (App. Br. 14; see also Reply Br. 2-5.) We do not find this argument persuasive because we agree with the Examiner that "Poland clearly delineates between the image display area 20 and the activation areas 22/24/26 ('user interface') (see at least paragraph 33); the reference display area 20 alone amounts to a 'display screen', such that the prior art screen is 'adjacent' the interface areas (see Fig. 2)" (Ans. 4; FF 1-2). We note that the claims do not require that the display screen be mounted at a location that is separate and via a distinct mechanism and distinct enclosure from that of the user interface. The requirement in claim 22 is that the user interface and display screen are "adjacent". In other words, because Poland's display screen is adjacent to the user interface and both are mounted in the same enclosure, Poland's device reads on "a display screen mounted in an enclosure" and "a user interface mounted in the enclosure adjacent the display screen" as claimed. "[L ]imitations are not to be read into the claims from the specification." In re Van Geuns, 988 F.2d 7 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 1181, 1184 (Fed. Cir. 1993). See also Jn re Selj; 671F.2d1344, 1348 (CCPA 1982) ("[A]ppellant's arguments fail from the outset because ... they are not based on limitations appearing in the claims."). Appellants contend that "Poland describes that an important aspect of the invention is that the user input for controlling the ultrasound imaging system 10 is not required from hard UI components, for example, buttons, a trackball, function keys and TGC potentiometers and the like, nor from separate soft UI components, such as an EL (electro-luminescent) display," and that "Poland goes on to describe that the all of the control functions performed by such hard and soft UI components are now represented by virtual controls that are displayed on the touchscreen along with the ultrasound images" (App. Br. 16 (emphasis removed); see also Reply Br. 5- 6). We are not persuaded. We agree with the Examiner that "the virtual controls of Poland fall well within the broadest reasonable scope of the presently claimed 'mode buttons', as they are well known types of GUI radio buttons that affect a mode of the reference system operation" (Ans. 5; FF 1-2). That is, Poland's virtual buttons reasonably satisfy the requirement of claim 22 for "user input that is operable without moving parts" (FF 1-2). Appellants contend that "Poland makes clear that the touchscreen is the display element that includes a visual field (the entire field of which is where the virtual buttons or image is displayed) having all of the UI elements, thereby also defining the user interface" (App. Br. 16). Appellants also contend that "Poland specifically teaches that none of the user inputs should be separate from the display screen as discussed above. Accordingly, 8 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 it is submitted that Poland teaches away from the required user interface recited in claim 22" (id. at 18). We are not persuaded. We agree with the Examiner that Appellants "fail[] to provide substantive evidence to show where Poland specifically and explicitly discourages the display area as being anything but adjacent to his user inputs (i.e., that he 'teaches away' from this arrangement)" (Ans. 5). Like our appellate reviewing court, "[w]e will not read into a reference a teaching away from a process where no such language exists." DyStar Textilfarben GmbH & Co. Deutschland KG v. C.H. Patrick Co., 464 F.3d 1356, 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2006). Appellants contend that Poland does not teach "'a user interface mounted in the enclosure adjacent the display screen and including at least one user input that is operable without moving parts' as required by claim 22" (App. Br. 17). We disagree for the reasons given above. Accordingly, we agree with the Examiner that "the broadest reasonable interpretation of 'mounted' includes both 'arranged or assembled for use or display' as well as 'prepared for examination or display' (Merriam Webster), both of which are reasonably met by the user input taught by Poland" (Ans. 5). To the extent that Appellants are arguing that Poland does not teach "one user input that is operable without moving parts," we disagree. Poland teaches "[a] processor (16) is coupled to the touchscreen (18) for detecting a touch on the activation areas (22, 24, 26) and performing the function associated with each activation area (22, 24, 26) upon being touched" (FF 1) which reads on this claimed limitation. Appellants contend that "the enclosure of Richardson is configured for use with a device having movable buttons, and as such, one would not 9 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 look to Richardson or use the enclosure or Richardson with a device that does not have movable buttons" (App. Br. 18). More particularly, Appellants argue that "the enclosure of Richardson is configured such that the raised portion and not the recessed portion (covering the screen) is configured to allow the buttons thereunder to be operated by a user" (id. at 19 (emphasis removed); see also Reply Br. 6-7). We do not find this argument persuasive because we agree with the Examiner that a skilled artisan would readily recognize that the raised portions of Richardson would not be necessary with a virtual- button arrangement such as Poland's, i.e. that the function attributed to the raised portions of Richardson's cover would not be required with the flat, virtual interface of Poland (see also MPEP 2144.04 II). Removal of the raised portions of Richardson's cover eliminates its function for use with mechanical buttons to the extent that such removal cannot reasonably be construed as an indicia ofunobviousness. The skilled artisan would readily recognize that the general teaching of Richardson to cover an electronic interface with a protective yet interactive housing would have clearly improved the device of Poland, to the extent that such potential for obvious improvement amounts to sufficient motivation to combine their teachings. (Ans. 6 (emphasis removed)). Appellants contend that Richardson is directed to a case that allows a screen to be covered with the sheet of thin plastic (that is deformable), but the raised portion is for use with the user inputs. Thus, if user inputs are provided as part of the user interface mounted in the enclosure adjacent the display screen, the user input would be covered by the flexible portion (to allow, for example, a user to press the buttons thereunder) and not the non-flexible portion defining the facade. 10 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 (App. Br. 19-20). We are not persuaded. We agree with the Examiner that "Richardson explicitly describes the touch screen cover as being rigid in multiple instances throughout the reference, such as 'the protective screen membrane 1306 may be ... rigid'" (Ans. 6; FF 5). Moreover, Richardson expressly teaches that the cover functions with a touch screen similar to that relied upon by Poland, supporting the Examiner's reasoning that the cover of Richardson would not interfere with the touchscreen buttons of Poland (FF 1, 5). Claim 25 Appellants contend that Poland does not teach "the user interface is adjacent to at least one edge of the display screen and in the enclosure separate from the display screen" (App. Br. 20-21; see also Reply Br. 7). We agree. Claim 25 requires a separate enclosure, an element that the Examiner does not establish is taught by either Poland or Richardson. Claims 27 and 49 Appellants contend that "the sheet of thin plastic or membrane (defined as the one-piece facade) of Richardson only extends over the display and not to the edges thereof. As such, the membrane does not extend over at least a portion of one of the side edges" (App. Br. 21; see also Reply Br. 7). We are not persuaded. We agree with the Examiner that "the edge where the recessed portion of Richardson meets the raised outer portion of Richardson would reasonably meet and at least partially cover such 'side edge"' (Ans. 7; FF 4). 11 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Claim 29 Appellants argue that "there is no description or suggestion of such a weight limitation in Poland" (App. Br. 21; see also Reply Br. 8). We do not find this argument persuasive because we agree with the Examiner that Appellants provide "no evidence to show a novel, unexpected result achieved by such weight, and also provide[] no persuasive arguments or evidence to effectively rebut Examiner's contention that handheld computers were well known to be between 'about 3 oz and 10 lbs,'" and that "the refinement of Poland and Richardson's general teaching of the system being 'portable' to yield a system weight of 'about 3 oz to 10 lbs' amounts to nothing more than an unpatentable optimization" (Ans. 8). See In re Aller, 220 F .2d 454, 456 (CCPA 1955) ("where the general conditions of a claim are disclosed in the prior art, it is not inventive to discover the optimum or workable ranges by routine experimentation"). Claim 30 Appellants argue that Polland's "buttons [that are] displayed on a screen are not the same as a soft key or any other type of physical button or key" (App. Br. 21) We do not find this argument persuasive. We agree with the Examiner that the virtual controls of Poland do, in fact, reasonably amount to "mode keys" as claimed. Regarding the claimed "soft key", the term "soft" covers, within its broadest reasonable definition, "virtual" (i.e., "software" vs "hardware"), and for at least that reason, the variable-function virtual controls 26 of Poland also amount to "soft keys" as claimed. (Ans. 8). 12 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 Claim 31 Appellants argue that Poland teaches that an important aspect of the invention is that the user input for controlling the ultrasound imaging system 10 is not required from hard UI components, for example, buttons, a trackball, function keys and TGC potentiometers and the like, nor from separate soft UI components, such as an EL (electroluminescent) display. Thus, Poland teaches away from a soft UI component such as a soft key. (App. Br. 22 (emphasis removed).) Appellants argue that "[t]hus, Poland teaches away from a soft UI component such as a soft key" (id.). We do not find these arguments persuasive because we agree with the Examiner that the claims do not require the user input and the display screen to be separate and that Poland does not teach away from a device having a display adjacent to a user interface, as discussed above (see Ans. 8). Claims 33-35 and 53 In regard to claims 33-35 and 53; Appellants make similar arguments in which "buttons displayed on a screen are not the same as mode key, which is a separate key, such as one of the mode buttons 13 6 shown in Figure 3 of the present application" (App. Br. 22). Accordingly, we agree with the Examiner and are not persuaded for the reasons set forth above (see Ans. 8). Claims 38 and 55 Appellants contend that "[ w ]hile Poland describes a stylus, there is nothing in Poland that describes a stylus that uses radio frequency signals to interact with the touchscreen" (App. Br. 22). We agree. The Examiner has not provided sufficient evidence on this record to support the conclusion that 13 Appeal2014-005227 Application 11/895,346 it would have been obvious to use radio frequency signals for a stylus in Poland's device. Accordingly, we affirm the rejection of claims 22-24, 26-37, 39-54, and 56-60, and reverse the rejection of claims 25, 38, and 55. SUMMARY In summary, we affirm the rejection of claims 25 and 40 under 35 U.S.C. § 112 as being indefinite. We affirm the rejection of claims 22, 44, and 58 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Poland and Richardson. Claims 23, 24, 26-37, and 39--43 fall with claim 22, claims 45-54, 56, and 57 fall with claim 44, and claims 59 and 60 fall with claim 58. We reverse the rejection of claims 25, 38, and 55 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Poland and Richardson. 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-IN-PART 14 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation