Ex Parte Torgerson et alDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesMay 14, 201211184717 (B.P.A.I. May. 14, 2012) 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. 11/184,717 07/19/2005 Nathan A. Torgerson 151-P-21386USU2 9858 54228 7590 05/14/2012 IPLM GROUP, P.A. POST OFFICE BOX 18455 MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55418 EXAMINER DIETRICH, JOSEPH M ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3762 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 05/14/2012 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 BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES __________ Ex parte NATHAN A. TORGERSON, CHRISTOPHER M. ARNETT, STEVEN J. NELSON, and ALLEN D. ALMENDINGER __________ Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 Technology Center 3700 __________ Before DONALD E. ADAMS, DEMETRA J. MILLS, and JEFFREY N. FREDMAN, Administrative Patent Judges. FREDMAN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 involving claims to a medical device communication system. The Examiner rejected the claims as obvious and provisionally under the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 2 Statement of the Case The Claims Claims 1-23 are on appeal. Claim 1 is representative and reads as follows: 1. A medical device communication system, comprising: an external device being configured to transcutaneously send an identification command to at least one of a plurality of implantable medical devices; said plurality of implantable medical devices being configured to respond to said identification command with an uplink response in one of a plurality of uplink time slots; said external device being configured to receive said uplink response from each of said at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices; said external device being configured to arbitrate among individual ones of said plurality of implantable medical devices by establishing transcutaneous communication with only a selected one of said plurality of implanted medical devices based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response of at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices. The issues A. The Examiner provisionally rejected claims 1-23 on the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-16 of copending Application No. 11/184,550 and Marsan 1 (Ans. 4- 5). 1 Marsan et al., US 6,570,861 B1, issued May 27, 2003. Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 3 B. The Examiner provisionally rejected claims 1-23 on the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-25 of copending Application No. 11/184,718 and Marsan (Ans. 5- 6). C. The Examiner rejected claims 1, 2, 8, 9, 13, 14, 20, and 21 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich 2 and Marsan (Ans. 6-8). D. The Examiner rejected claims 10 and 22 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich and Marsan (Ans. 8). E. The Examiner rejected claims 3-6 and 16-19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich, Marsan, and Wu 3 (Ans. 8-11). F. The Examiner rejected claims 7, 11, 12, and 23 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich, Marsan, and Snell 4 (Ans. 11-13). A. & B Double Patenting The Examiner finds the claims of copending Applications 11/184,550 and 11/184,718 “are not patentably distinct from each other because claim 1 of Application 11/184,550 comprises every limitation of those in claim 1 of the instant application, except selecting a device based, at least in part, upon signal strength” (Ans. 4, 5). The Examiner finds that “Marsan teaches that it is known to have a plurality of remote devices respond to a single device in a plurality time slots and arbitrate among individual ones of the devices by establishing a telemetric communication . . . based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response” (id. at 4-5). The Examiner finds it 2 Haubrich et al., US 6,482,154 B1, issued Nov. 19, 2002. 3 Wu, C., US 6,836,469 B1, issued Dec. 28, 2004. 4 Snell, J., US 2003/0220673 A1, published Nov. 27, 2003. Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 4 obvious “to modify the selection based [up]on user selection as taught by Application No. 11/184,550 with [a] selection based on signal strength as taught by Marsan, since such a modification would provide the predictable results of allowing the device with the strongest telemetric signal to be accessed” (Ans. 5). Appellants contend that “neither of Application Nos. 11/184,550 nor 11/184,718 contains any claims making a selection based on signal strength” (App. Br. 12). Appellants contend that “Marsan et al „861 does not show, disclose or suggest the subject matter of an external device arbitrating and establishing communication with a selected implantable medical device on the basis of signal strength as it is defined by the claims” (id.). The issue with respect to this rejection is: Does the evidence of record support the Examiner‟s conclusion that the claims of copending applications 11/184,550 and 11/184,718 in combination with Marsan render claim 1 obvious? Findings of Fact 1. Claim 1 of copending application 11/184,718 is reproduced below: 1. A medical device communication system, comprising: a plurality of implantable medical devices; and an external device being configured to transcutaneously send an identification command to at least one of said plurality of implantable medical devices; said plurality of implantable medical devices being configured to respond to said identification command with an uplink response in one of a plurality of uplink time slots; Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 5 said external device being configured to receive said uplink response from each of said at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices; said external device being configured to arbitrate among individual ones of said plurality of implantable medical devices by establishing transcutaneous communication only to a selected one of said plurality of implanted medical devices based, at least in part, upon an order in time of which said plurality of implanted medical devices respond with said uplink response. 2. Claim 4 copending application 11/184,718 is reproduced below: 4. A medical device communication system as in claim 1 wherein said external device selects based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response of at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices. 3. Claim 1 copending application 11/184,550 is reproduced below: 1. A medical device communication system, comprising: a plurality of implantable medical devices; an external device being configured to transcutaneously send an identification command to at least one of said plurality of implantable medical devices; said plurality of implantable medical devices being configured to respond to said identification command with an uplink response in one of a plurality of uplink time slots; said external device being configured to receive said uplink response from each of said at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices; said external device being configured to arbitrate among individual ones of said plurality of implantable medical devices by establishing transcutaneous communication with only a selected one of said plurality of implanted medical devices based, at least in part, upon a Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 6 user selection of one of said plurality of implanted medical devices. 4. Marsan teaches that the “communication system determines a signal strength of a signal received from a user of the communication resource and, based on the signal strength determination, assigns the user one or more of the communication channels that are then available” (Marsan, col. 2, ll. 27-31). 5. Marsan teaches that “the processor 204 assigns the time slot in the highest signal strength set of the different sets of time slots (e.g., time slot 433 would be assigned since it is in a higher signal strength set of time slots than time slots 413 and 414)” (Marsan, col. 5, ll. 43-47). Principles of Law It is well settled that during examination, the PTO must interpret terms in a claim using “the broadest reasonable meaning of the words in their ordinary usage as they would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art, taking into account whatever enlightenment by way of definitions or otherwise that may be afforded by the written description contained in the applicant‟s specification.” In re Morris, 127 F.3d 1048, 1054 (Fed. Cir. 1997). “Obviousness-type double patenting is a judicially created doctrine intended to prevent improper timewise extension of the patent right by prohibiting the issuance of claims in a second patent which are not „patentably distinct‟ from the claims of a first patent.” In re Braat, 937 F.2d 589, 592 (Fed. Cir. 1991). “It is the claims, not the specification, that define an invention…. And it is the claims that are compared when assessing Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 7 double patenting.” Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp. v. Smith, 959 F.2d 936, 943 (Fed. Cir. 1992). Analysis Claim Interpretation Claim interpretation is at the heart of patent examination because before a claim is properly interpreted, its scope cannot be compared to the prior art. In this case, the limitation in claim 1 at issue is the requirement that communication is “based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response” (Claim 1). During prosecution, claim terms are given their broadest reasonable interpretation as they would be understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art in light of the Specification. Therefore, we first turn to the Specification to determine whether the phrase “based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response” has any specified definition. The Specification teaches that “[o]ne of the plurality of implanted medical devices to establish transcutaneous communication is selected based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of the uplink response of at least one of the plurality of implanted medical devices” (Spec. 2 ¶ 8). The Specification is permissive that the device selection may be “based, at least in part” on the “signal strength,” but may also be based on other criteria. In light of Claim 1 and the Specification, the “based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response” requirement of claim 1 is reasonably interpreted as simply requiring that some correlation exists between the signal strength and the device with which communication is desired. See In re Zletz, 893 F.2d 319, 322 (Fed. Cir. 1989) (“[D]uring Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 8 patent prosecution when claims can be amended, ambiguities should be recognized, scope and breadth of language explored, and clarification imposed.”) Provisional Double Patenting – copending application - 11/184,718 There is no dispute that claim 1 of copending application 11/184,718 teaches all of the limitations of the instant claim 1, differing only in requiring that the criteria for selection is “based, at least in part, upon an order in time,” rather than being based in part upon an order in time as in the instant claim. However, claim 4 of copending application 11/184,718, which directly depends from claim 1 of copending application 11/184,718, expressly teaches that the “external device selects based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response of at least one of said plurality of implanted medical devices” (Claim 4 of copending application 11/184,718; FF 2). This teaching of claim 4 of copending application 11/184,718 expressly suggests the use of the device based on “signal strength,” which is reasonably interpreted as being based, at least in part, upon signal strength of the uplink response. In addition, Marsan teaches that the “communication system determines a signal strength of a signal received from a user of the communication resource and, based on the signal strength determination, assigns the user one or more of the communication channels that are then available” (Marsan, col. 2, ll. 27-31; FF 4). Marsan teaches that “the processor 204 assigns the time slot in the highest signal strength set of the Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 9 different sets of time slots (e.g., time slot 433 would be assigned since it is in a higher signal strength set of time slots than time slots 413 and 414)” (Marsan, col. 5, ll. 43-47; FF 5). We therefore agree with the Examiner that it would have been obvious over claims 1 and 4 of copending application 11/184,718 and Marsan to base the selection of an implanted medical device for communication, at least in part, upon signal strength since both claim 4 of copending application 11/184,718 and Marsan teach the use of signal strength to control the process by which devices are contacted (FF 2, 4, 5). Provisional Double Patenting – copending application - 11/184,550 There is no dispute that claim 1 of copending application 11/184,550 teaches all of the limitations of the instant claim 1, differing only in requiring that the criteria for selection is “based, at least in part, upon a user selection” of the uplink, rather than being based in part upon an order in time as in the instant claim (FF 3). Marsan teaches that the “communication system determines a signal strength of a signal received from a user of the communication resource and, based on the signal strength determination, assigns the user one or more of the communication channels that are then available” (Marsan, col. 2, ll. 27- 31; FF 4). Marsan teaches that “the processor 204 assigns the time slot in the highest signal strength set of the different sets of time slots (e.g., time slot 433 would be assigned since it is in a higher signal strength set of time slots than time slots 413 and 414)” (Marsan, col. 5, ll. 43-47; FF 5). We therefore agree with the Examiner that it would have been obvious over claim 1 of copending application 11/184,550 and Marsan to Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 10 base the selection of an implanted medical device for communication, at least in part, upon signal strength since Marsan teaches the use of signal strength to control the process by which devices are contacted (FF 3, 4, 5). Conclusion of Law The evidence of record supports the Examiner‟s conclusion that the claims of copending applications 11/184,550 and 11/184,718 in combination with Marsan render claim 1 obvious. C. & D. 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Haubrich and Marsan The Examiner finds that Haubrich discloses a system and method comprising: a plurality of IMDs . . . an external device configured to transcutaneously send an identification command and receive a response . . . said plurality of IMDs configured to respond to the command . . . in a plurality of channels . . . said external device being configured to arbitrate among individual ones of said plurality medical devices by establishing transcutaneous communication with only a selected one of said plurality (Ans. 7). The Examiner finds that Haubrich “fails to explicitly say that the channels are uplink time slots and that the arbitration is based on signal strength” (id.). The Examiner finds that Marsan teaches to “arbitrate among individual ones of the devices by establishing a telemetric communication with a selected one of the devices, based, at least in part, upon a signal strength of said uplink response of at least one of said plurality of base units” (id.). The Examiner finds it obvious to modify the telemetry signal as taught by Haubrich with the telemetric network using the time slots based on signal Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 11 strength as taught by Marsan, since such a modification would provide the predictable results of allowing the plurality of IMDs to be sorted and chosen without interference between the signals, and allow the most prominent signal to be selected first. (Ans. 7-8.) Appellants contend that “Haubrich et al „154 does not show, disclose or suggest that the external device arbitrates among the responding implantable medical devices” (App. Br. 14). Appellants contend that “the external device [of Haubrich] arbitrates, decides or determines nothing, instead merely identifying a list of implantable medical devices which are within communication range. A separate, manual event must be conducted in order to identify the desired implantable medical device, which may then be selected from the list” (id.). Appellants contend that “Marsan et al „861 is only concerned with facilitating communication, not with arbitrating among devices to establish communication with one. Facilitating communication with any device and arbitrating to decide on one device are fundamentally different” (id. at 15). Appellants contend that the “Office Action provides no credible basis for why a designer of an implantable medical device weighing a few ounces and consuming a fraction of an ampere of current would adapt a design for a cellular tower to enable the implantable device to communicate” (id. at 18). The issue with respect to this rejection is: Does the evidence of record support the Examiner‟s conclusion that Haubrich and Marsan render obvious a device which is “configured to arbitrate” between medical devices based in part “upon a signal strength of said uplink response” as required by claim 1? Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 12 Findings of Fact 6. The Specification teaches that: the user may look at the strength of the uplink signal from each of the plurality of implanted medical devices. In this exemplary embodiment, time-slot arbitration would be used with many different time slots to minimize and, hopefully, prevent uplink response collisions. The user may receive uplink response from all of the implanted medical devices using the arbitration techniques as described above in the first exemplary technique and then look to see which implanted medical device replied with the strongest uplink signal. The user may then select the implanted device having the strongest uplink response signal, which is usually the implanted medical device that is closest to the external device issuing the identification command. (Spec. 12 ¶ 52.) 7. The Specification teaches that: external device 15 must still determine which of the medical devices 22 with which to establish communication. This can be done by building a list of medical devices 22 responding to the identification request and allowing a user of the external device 15, e.g., a physician or the patient, to select the appropriate medical device 22. (Spec. 8 ¶ 41.) 8. The Specification teaches that in a “first exemplary technique implanted medical devices respond to an identification command (sent by an external unit) with various random delays to prevent the uplink response from multiple implanted medical devices from overlapping . . . . The user may select from the list of devices” (Spec. 8-9 ¶ 43). Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 13 9. The Specification teaches that a second exemplary technique uses a pseudo-random system that is based on downlink telemetry strength. . . . The user can then select the implanted medical device that first responds to the identification command. . . . The arbitration is faster than the first exemplary technique, since it doesn't need to find and identify every implanted medical device within range, but only needs to find the closest implanted medical device, which responds in one of the earliest timeslots. (Spec. 9-10 ¶ 45.) 10. The Specification teaches that in a “third exemplary technique, the user may look at the strength of the uplink signal from each of the plurality of implanted medical devices. . . . The user may then select the implanted device having the strongest uplink response signal” (Spec. 12 ¶ 52). 11. Haubrich teaches a telemetry system for communications between an implanted medical device and an associated external medical device located at a distance from the implanted device, the present invention is intended to assure that there is no ambiguity as to which implanted device is communicating with the external device or as to which patient has the device implanted. (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 52-58.) 12. Haubrich teaches that the “external device preferably issues a request for communication, which may be received by any of a population of implantable devices that employ the inventive telemetry system” (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 63-66). Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 14 13. Haubrich teaches that “[t]hose devices within range of the external device may in response send a telemetry transmission indicating that the request for communication has been received” (Haubrich, col. 1, l. 66 to col. 2, l. 1). 14. Haubrich teaches that a “separate mechanism is provided for activating only the implantable device within a specific patient to send a telemetry transmission including an event signal indicative that the implanted device has been so activated” (Haubrich, col. 2, ll. 3-7). 15. Haubrich teaches that “one or a number of communication channels may be available” (Haubrich, col. 3, ll. 19-20). 16. Haubrich teaches that “even if a telemetry link is established between the external device and an implanted device, there may still be uncertainty as to which patient‟s device is communicating with the external device” (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 45-50). 17. Marsan teaches that “a need exists for a method and apparatus for assigning use of a radio frequency communication resource in a manner such that ACCP [adjacent channel coupled power interference] is minimized while all communication channels are utilized” (Marsan, col. 1, ll. 59-62). 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 Int’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. As noted by the Court in KSR, Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 15 “[a] person of ordinary skill is also a person of ordinary creativity, not an automaton.” 550 U.S. at 421. Analysis Claim Interpretation We again begin with claim interpretation, and in particular, the phrase “external device being configured to arbitrate” in Claim 1. As discussed above, claim terms are given their broadest reasonable interpretation as they would be understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art in the light of the Specification. Therefore, we first turn to the Specification to determine whether the phrase “external device being configured to arbitrate” has any specified definition. The Specification provides no specific definition for an “external device being configured to arbitrate.” The phrase “being configured to arbitrate” does not exclude the situation where the device presents a list of implanted devices to a user for selection, since such a device is “configured to arbitrate” with the assistance of the user. The Specification provides three exemplary techniques, but in each technique, the “external device being configured to arbitrate” functions to obtain information after which the “user may select from the list of devices” (Spec. 8-9 ¶ 43; FF 8); “[t]he user can then select the implanted medical device that first responds to the identification command” (Spec. 9-10 ¶ 45; FF 9); and “[t]he user may then select the implanted device having the strongest uplink response signal” (Spec. 12 ¶ 52; FF 10). Thus, in each case, the device obtains data which is subsequently used by a user to perform the actual selection of the implanted medical device (FF Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 16 8-10). Therefore, the phrase “external device being configured to arbitrate” is most reasonably interpreted as a device which captures information from implanted medical devices and presents it to a user who selects the desired medical device using the external medical device, resulting in a selected implanted medical device for connection. Obviousness Haubrich teaches a telemetry system for communications between an implanted medical device and an associated external medical device located at a distance from the implanted device, the present invention is intended to assure that there is no ambiguity as to which implanted device is communicating with the external device or as to which patient has the device implanted. (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 52-58; FF 11.) Haubrich teaches that the “external device preferably issues a request for communication, which may be received by any of a population of implantable devices that employ the inventive telemetry system” (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 63-66; FF 12). Haubrich teaches that a “separate mechanism is provided for activating only the implantable device within a specific patient to send a telemetry transmission including an event signal indicative that the implanted device has been so activated” (Haubrich, col. 2, ll. 3-7; FF 14). The Examiner acknowledges that Haubrich does not teach arbitration using signal strength (Ans. 7). Marsan teaches that the “communication system determines a signal strength of a signal received from a user of the communication resource and, based on the signal strength determination, assigns the user one or more of the communication channels that are then available” (Marsan, col. 2, ll. 27- Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 17 31; FF 4). Marsan teaches a radio communication system where a “processor 204 assigns the time slot in the highest signal strength set of the different sets of time slots (e.g., time slot 433 would be assigned since it is in a higher signal strength set of time slots than time slots 413 and 414)” (Marsan, col. 5, ll. 43-47; FF 5). Applying the KSR standard of obviousness to the findings of fact, we conclude that an ordinary artisan would have reasonably found that Haubrich and Marsan render obvious a medical communication system with an external device which communicates to and receives responses from a plurality of implanted medical devices (FF 11-15) where the external device establishes communication based in part upon the signal strength of the implanted medical device response (FF 4-5). Such a combination is merely a “predictable use of prior art elements according to their established functions.” KSR, 550 U.S. at 417. Appellants contend that “Haubrich et al „154 does not show, disclose or suggest that the external device arbitrates among the responding implantable medical devices” (App. Br. 14). Appellants contend that “the external device [of Haubrich] arbitrates, decides or determines nothing, instead merely identifying a list of implantable medical devices which are within communication range. A separate, manual event must be conducted in order to identify the desired implantable medical device, which may then be selected from the list” (id.). We are not persuaded. Appellants wish to interpret “arbitrate” so that the external device selects the implantable medical device with which to communicate without any input from the user. However, this interpretation Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 18 is not consistent with the Specification, as we discussed above in our claim interpretation, which not only permits interaction of a user for the selection, but each and every example requires user participation (FF 8-10). In addition, Haubrich teaches that the “operator may then determine whether the received event signal correlates in time to the response-provoking event. If so, the operator can conclude that the device that transmitted the event signal is the device with which communication is desired, and may initiate a telemetry session with that implanted, device” (Haubrich, col. 2, ll. 20-25; FF 6). The teaching that the selection is based upon whether a signal “correlates in time” is reasonably interpreted as arbitrating, by use of the external device which of the implanted devices will receive communication based in part upon the order in time with which the devices contact the external device (FF 11-15). Appellants contend that “Marsan et al „861 is only concerned with facilitating communication, not with arbitrating among devices to establish communication with one. Facilitating communication with any device and arbitrating to decide on one device are fundamentally different” (App. Br. 15). While we agree that Marsan is not utilizing signal strength to establish whether or not to communicate with a device, Marsan clearly teaches the use of signal strength to assign communication with devices (FF 4-5). More importantly, Marsan teaches that the processor itself performs the selection without user input (FF 5), so that even if the claim was interpreted to require the device to “arbitrate” without any user or other input, Marsan teaches the Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 19 use of processors to perform selection of communication channels based upon input criteria such as signal strength (FF 4-5). Appellants contend that the “Office Action provides no credible basis for why a designer of an implantable medical device weighing a few ounces and consuming a fraction of an ampere of current would adapt a design for a cellular tower to enable the implantable device to communicate” (App. Br. 18). We are not persuaded. The test for non-analogous art is first whether the art is within the field of the inventor‟s endeavor and, if not, whether it is “reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which the inventor was involved.” In re Wood, 599 F.2d 1032, 1036 (CCPA 1979). “A reference is reasonably pertinent if, even though it may be in a different field” of endeavor, it logically would have commended itself to an inventor's attention in considering his problem “because of the matter with which it deals.” In re Clay, 966 F.2d 656, 659 (Fed. Cir. 1992). Haubrich teaches that the “external device preferably issues a request for communication, which may be received by any of a population of implantable devices that employ the inventive telemetry system” (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 63-66; FF 12). Haubrich is concerned with medical telemetry, in particular concerned that “even if a telemetry link is established between the external device and an implanted device, there may still be uncertainty as to which patient‟s device is communicating with the external device” (Haubrich, col. 1, ll. 45-50; FF 16). Marsan teaches that “a need exists for a method and apparatus for assigning use of a radio frequency communication resource in a manner such Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 20 that ACCP [adjacent channel coupled power interference] is minimized while all communication channels are utilized” (Marsan, col. 1, ll. 59-62; FF 17). Haubrich shares Marsan‟s interest in minimizing interference between radio frequency devices which communicate with a base device since Haubrich‟s medical telemetry system involves radio frequency devices which communicate with an external base device (FF 12-16). Consequently, Marsan‟s teachings on minimizing radio frequency interference on radio frequency devices is reasonably found to be pertinent to Haubrich‟s radio frequency devices. Conclusion of Law The evidence of record supports the Examiner‟s conclusion that Haubrich and Marsan render obvious a device which is “configured to arbitrate” between medical devices based in part “upon a signal strength of said uplink response” as required by claim 1. E. 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Haubrich, Marsan, and Wu The Examiner finds that “Wu teaches that it is known to instruct medical devices to cease responding to the identification command if at least two of the medical devices respond with an uplink signal in one of the uplink time slots and to repeat sending the identification command and to repeat receiving the uplink signal” (Ans. 9). The Examiner finds it obvious to “modify the invention as taught by Haubrich in view of Marsan with the command as taught by Wu, since such a modification would provide the predictable results of allowing further communications with base sites (implantable medical devices) even when interference occurs between two or more of the devices” (id.). Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 21 The Examiner provides sound fact-based reasoning for combining Wu with Haubrich and Marsan. We adopt the fact finding and analysis of the Examiner as our own. Appellants argue the underlying obviousness rejection, but Appellants do not identify any material defect in the Examiner‟s reasoning for combining Haubrich and Marsan with Wu. Since Appellants only argue the underlying rejection which we affirmed above, we affirm this rejection for the reasons stated by the Examiner. F. 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) over Haubrich, Marsan, and Snell The Examiner finds that “Snell teaches that it is known that the external device is configured to select based upon, at least in part, upon which of said plurality of implanted medical devices are first to respond with said uplink response” (Ans. 11). The Examiner finds it obvious to “modify the system and method as taught by Haubrich in view of Marsan with the command as taught by Snell, since such a modification would provide the Predictable results [sic] of optimizing response time to the first signal” (id. at 11-12). The Examiner provides sound fact-based reasoning for combining Snell with Haubrich and Marsan. We adopt the fact finding and analysis of the Examiner as our own. Appellants argue the underlying obviousness rejection, but Appellants do not identify any material defect in the Examiner‟s reasoning for combining Haubrich and Marsan with Snell. Since Appellants only argue the underlying rejection which we affirmed above, we affirm this rejection for the reasons stated by the Examiner. Appeal 2011-001333 Application 11/184,717 22 SUMMARY In summary, we affirm the provisional rejection of claims 1-23 on the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-16 of copending Application No. 11/184,550 and Marsan. We affirm the provisional rejection of claims 1-23 on the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 1-25 of copending Application No. 11/184,718 and Marsan. We affirm the rejection of claim 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich and Marsan. Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1), we also affirm the rejection of claims 2, 8, 9, 13, 14, 20, and 21 as these claims were not argued separately. We affirm the rejection of claims 10 and 22 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich and Marsan. We affirm the rejection of claims 3-6 and 16-19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich, Marsan, and Wu. We affirm the rejection of claims 7, 11, 12, and 23 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Haubrich, Marsan, and Snell. 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 cdc Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation