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`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`____________
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`____________
`
`APPLE INC.,
`Petitioner,
`
`v.
`
`VALENCELL, INC.,
`Patent Owner.
`____________
`
`Case IPR2017-00319 (Patent 8,923,941 B2)
` Case IPR2017-00321 (Patent 8,923,941 B2)1,2
`____________
`
`Record of Oral Hearing
`Held: February 27, 2018
`____________
`
`
`
`
`Before BRIAN J. McNAMARA, JAMES B. ARPIN, and SHEILA F.
`McSHANE, Administrative Patent Judges.
`
`
`
`
`
`
`Case IPR2017-00319 (Patent 8,923,941 B2)
`Case IPR2017-00321 (Patent 8,923,941 B2)
`
`
`
`APPEARANCES:
`
`ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER:
`
`
`BYRON L. PICKARD, ESQUIRE
`MICHELLE K. HOLOUBEK, ESQUIRE
`MICHAEL D. SPECHT, ESQUIRE
`MARK CONSILVIO, ESQUIRE
`Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox
`1100 New York Avenue, N.W.
`Washington, D.C. 20005
`
`
`ON BEHALF OF THE PATENT OWNER:
`
`
`JUSTIN B. KIMBLE, ESQUIRE
`JEFFREY BRAGALONE, ESQUIRE
`Bragalone Conroy, P.C.
`2200 Ross Avenue, Suite 4500W
`Dallas, Texas 75201-7924
`
`and
`
`R. SCOTT RHOADES, ESQUIRE
`Warren Rhoades
`1212 Corporate Drive, Suite 250
`Irving, Texas 75038
`
`
`
`
`The above-entitled matter came on for hearing on Tuesday, February
`
`27, 2018, commencing at 11:50 a.m., at the U.S. Patent and Trademark
`Office, 600 Dulany Street, Alexandria, Virginia.
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`Case IPR2017-00321 (Patent 8,923,941 B2)
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`P R O C E E D I N G S
`- - - - -
`JUDGE McNAMARA: This is going to be the hearing in
`IPR2017-00319 and 00321. And again, we'll hear first from the petitioner,
`then the patent owner and any rebuttal from the petitioner. Petitioner has
`40 minutes. Is there some amount of time you would like me to alert you to?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: Yes, Your Honor, I would like to reserve ten
`minutes for rebuttal, please.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, before you begin, because we are
`doing this as a consolidated hearing, although it is the same patent for both
`cases, if there are arguments that you are presenting which are related only
`to one of the two petitions, if you would please specify which petition you
`are speaking of.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: Yes, Your Honor, I'll do that.
`JUDGE McNAMARA: All right. Please proceed.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: Thank you. Good morning. May it please the
`Board, my name is Michelle Holoubek and I represent petitioner, Apple Inc.,
`along with my colleagues Mark Consilvio and Michael Specht, who are
`backup counsel on this case.
`At the outset, as I mentioned, I would like to reserve ten minutes
`for rebuttal in this portion of the hearing. Both of them relate to Valencell's
`'941 patent. First I will plan to discuss the 319 IPR which covers claims 1 to
`2 and 6 to 13. And then I'll turn to the 321 IPR which covers claims 14
`through 21, along with its motion to amend.
`Regarding claims 1 to 2 and 6 to 13, the Board's analysis of these
`claims in its institution decision was correct. Rather than presenting
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`anything new during the trial portion of this proceeding, Valencell simply
`dug in on the same arguments as before that the Board had already
`considered in its institution decision. No new information has been provided
`that should change the decision previously rendered by the Board.
`Each claim in this IPR would have been obvious based on the
`combination of Luo and Craw, if we could turn to slide 2, which provides us
`with a summary. And again, these demonstratives that I'm referring to right
`now are in the 319 portion of our demonstratives.
`So we have the combination of Luo plus Craw, and then separately
`a combination based on the references Mault and Al-Ali. Valencell's
`arguments to the contrary rest on a faulty and overly narrow reading of claim
`1. And because the arguments have focused on claim 1 and not any of the
`dependent claims, claim 1 is what we'll focus on today as well.
`So let's take a look together at claim 1 to see what it actually
`recites. If we turn to slide 3, we can see that we have a method with two
`steps. We have a sensing step and a processing step. And I find these
`individual steps pretty long, so I find it helpful to break them up. In the
`sensing step, two types of data are sensed, physical activity and
`physiological information. This data is sensed by a monitoring device. And
`that monitoring device is open-ended so it can comprise any number of
`sensors. But the claim does require that the physical activity be sensed by at
`least one motion sensor. And the claim also requires that the physiological
`information be sensed by at least one PPG sensor. Now, that doesn't mean
`that all the physiological information sensed by the entire monitoring device
`must come solely from this PPG sensor. It simply means that the PPG
`sensor has to contribute to the physiological data. That's what it says.
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`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, with regard to claim construction, the
`physiological information was something we construed in the DI, and I don't
`believe that patent owner has challenged that construction. Is that your
`understanding?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: That's my understanding as well, yes.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Patent owner, however, has proposed a
`modification for the construction of the term "PPG sensor" which you just
`mentioned. Do you have any objections to the patent owner's construction
`of that term?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: No, I have no objections to that, Your Honor.
`We agree with that.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Are those the only claim construction issues that
`we are dealing with in the 319 case?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: To my knowledge, we don't really have any
`claim construction issues other than that correction to the PPG sensor. We
`have not disputed any of the claim constructions as instituted by the Board.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you very much, counselor. Please
`continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So going back to the claim, the claim says at
`least one PPG sensor for sensing the physiological data. That is open-ended.
`So other sensors can contribute to the physiological data as well. And that's
`important because Valencell's primary argument against both grounds in the
`319 IPR is that all the physiological data in the claim has to come from the
`PPG sensor. But again, the claim uses words like "comprising" and "at
`least" and is open-ended.
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`So we'll turn then to the processing step. What is it that's
`processed? Signals from the at least one motion sensor and the at least one
`PPG sensor. They are processed into a serial data output of physiological
`information and motion-related information. Note that this portion of the
`claim doesn't say that the serial data output is of the physiological
`information. Instead the claim recites a combined output of physiological
`information and motion-related information. And that output is configured
`such that heart rate and respiration rate can be extracted from the
`physiological information as it exists in the serial data output. That's not as
`it existed prior to the processing. Nothing in the processing step that you see
`here ties the physiological information of the serial data output directly and
`solely to the PPG sensor.
`So since the core of Valencell's arguments against the instituted
`grounds relies on a different reading of the claims that skips over a lot of
`words in the claims, it's our position that their arguments cannot succeed.
`So why don't we take a look at Luo and Mault in turn. Turning to slide 6 of
`petitioner's 319 demonstratives, Luo discloses a wearable physiological
`monitoring device. This one is configured to be worn over the ear. As
`shown in Figure 1, which is in the upper right-hand corner, Luo's device
`includes sensors S1 and S2 along with a processor CPM.
`If we look at Figure 3 here, Luo tells us that S1 is a physiological
`sensor for detecting, among other things, heart rate and respiration rate. Luo
`states that this is a PPG sensor. Luo also includes activity sensors S2 for
`sensing physical activity. Raw data from the physiological sensors that you
`see on that left-hand column of Figure 3 is fed into the processor CPM along
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`with the raw data from the activity sensors. And then Luo processes the
`sensor data to produce parameterized data.
`If we turn to slide 7, this processing is shown --
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, before you go to slide 7, go back to
`slide 6. Does it matter that Luo describes the use of a reflection plate?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: The only reason that it matters in the figure is
`because S1 is the PPG sensor, because a PPG sensor operates on the basis of
`emitted and then reflected or transmitted light in this configuration of Luo.
`So the reflection plate here allows the light that's been emitted by the PPG
`sensor. This, I think, attaches to the bottom of the ear lobe because this is an
`ear cuff. So light transmits through the ear, hits the reflection plate, bounces
`back through the ear and is received again by the PPG sensor.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, you said reflected or transmitted. I
`believe that Mault talks about the use of PPG sensors that reflect and
`transmit. And that was the basis of my question. Is there any significance in
`Luo's teaching to the use of a reflection plate?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: No particular significance. No, Your Honor,
`there are PPG sensors that operate without reflection plates.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you. Please continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So turning to slide 7, we can see the processor
`in a little bit more detail. This is Luo's Figure 4 and Figure 5. Figure 4
`covers how the physiological signals are processed. So you can see on the
`left-hand side of Figure 4, you have the individual sensors. And that raw
`data is fed into the center portion, which is what is happening in the
`processor. And so you can see that raw sensor data is converted by the
`processor into actual parameterized values that then tell you something
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`about the physiological information. So for instance, here you have body
`temperature, you have SpO2 values, you have glucose. Luo also describes
`in there that heart rate and respiration rate are calculated in the same way or
`at least in the same processing. So then those parameters, as you can see in
`Figure 4 --
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, where does Luo describe calculation
`of respiration rate?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So if we look at in the petition on pages 17 to
`18, this is in the 319 petition, so if we look at Luo in paragraph 1055 is the
`exhibit and paragraphs 28 and 46, and that's where it describes sort of the
`processing here. I will say claim 37 of Luo also discloses that a respiration
`rate is calculated. And as our expert testified when asked about this in
`deposition, you see between life sign 1 and life sign N, there are those dotted
`lines, there's a lot of sensors in there, and similarly when you see body
`temperature, SpO2 value and then there's some dotted lines, there's other
`data. The processing is not just simply limited to those three data
`parameters that you see in Figure 4. So respiration rate is one of those
`parameters that's calculated in this overall process.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you. Please continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So just finishing up on Figure 4, you can see
`that that physiological information is then output by the processor. Figure 5
`you see the same thing happening with the activity sensors where the
`activity sensors are input, the parameters themselves are processed and then
`the activity information is then output. And so if you turn back to slide 6
`momentarily, you can see that those outputs are transmitted to a recipient.
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`Luo indicates also that the monitoring device here can include a
`USB port for downloading the output health information to an external
`computer. So that implies that it's a serial data output. Now, Luo doesn't
`explicitly describe the format of that output data or how it might be
`converted into serial format. So that's where Craw comes in.
`If we could turn to slide 8, Craw describes a network of
`physiological monitoring devices that need to be able to communicate with
`each other. In Craw you have sensors that detect various parameters like
`blood pressure, heart rate and respiration rate just like in Luo. And shown in
`Figure 7G here, this is slide 8 of the 319 demonstratives, that illustrates how
`a serial data output would be formatted to transmit data. And you can see
`here in this figure how it has parameterized values, and that's such as what's
`demonstrated here, systolic value, diastolic pressure, heart rate, all of that
`serialized into a single signal. Figure 8I at the top of the page also illustrates
`what that signal looks like as a bit stream. And a receiving device such as a
`display that you can see in Figure 9A can then extract the data from the
`serial output signal and display the individual values.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, with regard to claim 1, I don't see
`where there is a transmitting step in that method. And I believe patent
`owner argued that there is a distinction in Craw between preparing serialized
`data for transmission or transmitting serialized data and the processing to
`obtain serialized data that's described in the method. How do you respond to
`that argument?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So this particular signal, when it's prepared, it
`doesn't have to be transmitted. It's not simply transmitting -- sorry,
`serializing the data for transmission. It is serializing the data into an output
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`data stream. That is all that the claim requires. And Craw does this. The
`fact that this data stream is then later taken and transmitted to an external
`device is in apposite to the claim because the claim doesn't provide any
`limitations on what happens with the data after it's been serialized.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you. Please continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: If we turn to slide 9, in fact, it's interesting to
`see the comparison between Craw on slide 8 that we just showed and slide 9.
`This shows Valencell's own annotations on Figure 18 of the '941 patent.
`You can see that this is exactly the same thing that's happening in claim 1 of
`the '941 patent and in Craw.
`In Figure 18 there of the '941 patent, sensors feed data into the
`processor multiplexer 602 in a serial string that looks just like Craw's.
`Figure 8I is output. And then just as Craw illustrated that its signal was
`formatted to include these parameterized information in the signal one after
`the other, you can see that the '941 patent signal is formatted in the same
`way.
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`I realize we have been going a long time on Luo plus Craw, so if
`there's no further questions on that, I would like to turn to the next ground of
`Mault and Al-Ali. Claim 1, if we turn to slide 15 of the 319 demonstratives,
`claim 1 is also unpatentable over the combination of Mault and Al-Ali.
`Mault discloses a monitoring device that's worn on the wrist, and Figure 4
`here shows the details of monitoring device 84. So you can see that
`monitoring device 84 includes a motion sensor 114 which corresponds to the
`activity sensor of claim 1. Device 84 also includes a heart rate sensor 109
`and a respiration sensor 105. Mault discloses that the heart rate sensor 109
`is a PPG sensor.
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`All the data from those sensors is fed into CPU 88 which processes
`the sensor data and then transmits it to other devices. Though as you
`mentioned, Your Honor, transmission is not necessary. That's just what
`happens with the data after it's been processed in Mault. Mault does not
`explicitly disclose processing the signals into the multiparameter serial data
`output. But that kind of data output would have been obvious in view of
`Al-Ali.
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`If we turn to slide 20, slide 20 illustrates how Al-Ali works.
`Al-Ali is a physiological measurement system quite similar to Mault. Raw
`data from multiple physiological sensors 1302 is input into a signal
`processor 1330 through interfaces 1310. As described in Al-Ali, signal
`processors 1330 convert the raw sensor data into physiological parameters
`such as pulse rate and respiration rate. Those parameters are then sent
`individually. That's those lines 1332 to multiplexor 1340. And then
`multiplexor 1340 then combines those parameters into a serial bit stream.
`So it is petitioner's position that applying that data formatting
`teaching to the output data of Mault would render claim 1 obvious.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, that brings up a point with regard to
`both of the combinations. Why would you do this combination? Why
`would you add the serialization teachings of Al-Ali to Mault? Why would
`you add the serialization teachings of Craw to Luo?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So in any combination you look to whether
`there was a motivation, but you also look to what was known in the art, what
`were the general possibilities for outputting data, for example, that was
`known in the art. And in both of these cases, this is simply application of a
`known technique to a known device and it produces a predictable result.
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`KSR tells us that that is a satisfactory rationale for combining two
`references. This is a particular individual trying to implement a
`physiological monitoring device would have their selection of any number
`of output options. And there may be reasons to use one over the other. And
`given that there are opportunities and options for outputting data, it's either
`going to be you are outputting it in parallel or you are outputting it in serial.
`So it's not like there are an infinite number of options there. So we think it's
`reasonable that a person of skill in the art would have taken this known
`technique of Al-Ali and applied it to the output of Mault as well as in the
`earlier combination of Luo and Craw.
`JUDGE ARPIN: But counselor, you are not relying on any
`particular teaching in either reference for their combination. It's just that it
`would be an option available to a person of ordinary skill in the art and that
`there are a limited number of options available? Is that a summary of your
`position?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: I think it's also that neither Luo nor Mault, the
`base reference in each combination, they don't really describe how the data
`would be output. These claims are very specific in what the particular
`format of that data is. And so when we are looking at, okay, if I am an
`innovator or an individual looking at Mault or looking at Luo, I know I need
`to output data. How am I going to output that data? Well, I would look to
`known output processing techniques in the art to determine how to output
`that data. So that's why when you are looking for that detail, that's why a
`person of skill in the art would look to Mault or Al-Ali or would look to
`Craw for the signal processing techniques.
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`JUDGE ARPIN: But there's nothing about the data here that lends
`itself to either serialization or another form of transmission?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: You can look at -- well, if you look at Al-Ali,
`for example, you have the signal processors that initially when they come up
`with the parameterized elements, like heart rate or respiration rate, if you are
`sending something via parallel and say you have a monitor that is taking
`several different parameters, to send them all in parallel there is a
`complication that is introduced. So you have to have multiple transmitters.
`These are typically very small devices when they are wearable devices. So
`you would have to have multiple transmitters if you are transmitting them in
`parallel. You would have to have sort of multiple encoding schemes on each
`one so that the receivers could identify which ones they are going to receive.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Do these arguments that you have just made
`appear in the record now?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: We do discuss about how there is the option of
`serial versus parallel and that one of skill in the art would be motivated to
`choose serial data. I don't know that we go into the detail of what all -- why
`there would be a disadvantage to going into parallel.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you, counselor. Please continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: Sure. I have about 11 minutes left, so I would
`like to turn to the 321 IPR, if there's no further questions about the 319 IPR.
`So now I'm going to be referring to the 321 demonstratives set, and we'll
`start off on slide 2 here.
`So each of claims 14 to 21 would have been obvious based on the
`combination of Kosuda and Maekawa and separately based on the
`combination of Aceti versus Fricke. As with the first case, Valencell here
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`has focused its arguments on the independent claim 14 and not any of the
`dependent claims. So that's where we'll also be focused today.
`Let's take a quick look at claim 14 on slide 3. Claim 14 is very
`different from the claim we just reviewed for the 319 IPR. Claim 14 is a
`device claim. And we have it here compared to Kosuda which is the
`primary reference. So I would like to walk through what this claim requires.
`It includes -- you know, the device, includes a housing. You have a chipset
`located within the housing. The chipset includes --
`JUDGE ARPIN: Counselor, one quick question. Again, I asked
`previously about the claim construction issues in the DI. We construed
`several terms, body, headset, housing, chipset, window. Neither party
`appears to dispute those constructions. Again, patent owner has suggested a
`modification to the PPG sensor construction. Is it correct to say that there is
`no dispute, at least from petitioner's side, on any of these claim terms or on
`the proposed term construction made by the patent owner?
`MS. HOLOUBEK: That is correct, Your Honor.
`JUDGE ARPIN: Thank you, counselor. Please continue.
`MS. HOLOUBEK: So going back to claim 14, we have a chipset
`in the housing. The chipset includes a PPG sensor, motion sensor and a
`signal processor. Housing also includes a window to optically expose the
`PPG sensor to a body and a non-air light transmissive material in optical
`communication with a PPG sensor and the window. This is clearly taught
`by Kosuda in view of Maekawa.
`Comparing the claim to Figure 3 of Kosuda, you can see the
`similarity. Kosuda include a housing comprising at least one window. And
`in Kosuda, that's the combination of main body watch case 10A, back lid 14
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`and transparent glass 13C. There's a chipset within the housing, and that's
`the circuit board shown in green on the demonstrative slide 5. That's in
`Figure 3 of Kosuda. And the PPG sensor here is shown by LED 13A and
`photodetector 13B. Acceleration sensor 12 constitutes the motion sensor,
`and there is also a processor located on the circuit board. That's shown by
`data processing circuit 17.
`Turning to slide 6 very quickly, Figure 5 of Kosuda illustrates how
`the processor takes signals from the motion sensor and signals from the PPG
`sensor. And that's the detected pulse wave data. And since we are in a
`hurry, I'll just mention that that's in Figure 5 of Kosuda. Those two signals
`are processed together and outputs a cleaner PPG signal with reduced
`motion artifacts. So that's just like the claim term requires that you are
`taking the motion sensor and the PPG sensor information and using that to
`create a cleaner PPG sensor signal with less noise.
`So Kosuda clearly discloses everything from claim 14 except for
`the non-air light transmissive material between the PPG sensor and the
`window. But that would have been obvious in view of Maekawa. If we turn
`to slide 7, you can see from Figures 2 and 6 of Maekawa that Maekawa has a
`structure that is very similar to Kosuda. You have a main watch case with a
`window on the bottom, and that's what's shown in Figure 2. I'm referring
`here to the 321 slide 7. And Figure 6, which is kind of in the middle of the
`page, shows that you have various components inside the watch case,
`including a PPG sensor.
`If we turn to slide 10, slide 10 shows Figure 10 of Maekawa. It
`shows it inverted from what's in the actual reference, but we show it inverted
`so you can see how closely this maps to Kosuda. Maekawa has a PPG
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`emitter and detector. That's emitter 4 and detector 5, along with a cover
`glass 23 just like Kosuda has. But Maekawa also teaches that it would be
`advantageous to include a fiber optic bundle or this light guide 40 between
`detector 5 and the cover glass. And Maekawa indicates that this light guide
`was added to prevent noise from reaching the PPG sensor's detector. So that
`improves the signal-to-noise ratio, the pulse signal. That light guide
`constitutes the non-air light transmissive material between the PPG sensor
`and the window. So when you incorporate that teaching into Kosuda, the
`combination discloses each and every element of claim 14.
`So with five minutes left, I would like to touch base on a study and
`then also briefly address the motion to amend. On slide 14 we can see Aceti.
`Again, we compare it here to claim 14. Aceti discloses a monitoring device
`100 that's shown in Figure 1. That's designed to be inserted into and wrap
`around a person's ear. A device 100 has two parts. It has a processing
`portion 102 and it has a conducting portion 104. And as you can see from
`the detail in Figure 3 of Aceti, Aceti includes a PPG sensor. It uses the term
`"PTG" instead. It's just another way of saying PPG. And an accelerometer,
`which is the motion sensor.
`Aceti indicates that those sensors can be located -- and referring
`here to slide 14 of petitioner's demonstratives, those sensors can be located
`in processor portion 102 or conductor portion 104. And then Aceti also
`includes a set of light guides. That's what hears the non-air light
`transmissive material that run through the conducting portion from the PPG
`sensor to the end cap 112. And those light guides are covered by a sheath
`which is what you see in Figure 1.
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`I want to jump quickly to the point that Valencell has made. They
`have said that this doesn't constitute a housing because conductor portion
`104 is detachable from processor portion 102. But that's simply not the case.
`The construction that we agree with that the Board included in its institution
`decision is that a cover -- is that a housing covers, protects, encloses or
`encloses a device. It's also considered a casing.
`And that's exactly what we have here. We have a conductor
`portion 104, and when we look at the device as a whole, we have to look at
`the device as a whole. The device doesn't include just the processor, which
`would be the case if that's all we were concerned about, then okay, we have
`a processor housing 106. But we are looking at the device as a whole. We
`have light guides embedded there in 104. We have the window included in
`the end cap 112. And when you consider that a housing covers all the
`elements of the device, that's exactly what we have here. We have one
`portion of the housing that covers the processing portion. We have a sheath
`that covers the conducting portion, and then we have the end cap 112 that
`includes the window, as is required by the claim.
`So unless there are any questions on Aceti, I believe that was the
`only argument that the patent owner had against Aceti. So in the remaining
`time I would like to briefly address the motion to amend.
`So if we just put up slide 18 of the 321 demonstratives, you can see
`that Valencell's claim amendments modify the recited processor of claim 14
`in two ways. First the processor extracts physiological and motion
`parameters; and then second, the processor processes data to be output. And
`that output data comprises physiological and motion-related information.
`That output data is parsed out so that an API can use it for an application.
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`Right now I'll just address associate claim 22. There's many
`reasons why the Board should not grant Valencell's motion to amend. There
`are a number of procedural issues with the motion that we've addressed in
`our briefs. One issue I do want to touch on is the claim construction. But I
`also want to note at the outset that regardless of claim construction on the
`motion to amend piece is that under either construction the substitute claims
`are clearly shown by the art. We have two grounds, which are Kosuda,
`Maekawa in view of Gupta which addresses this API limitation. And then
`we also illustrate how Aceti, Fricke and Craw render this obvious with Craw
`addressing the API limitations that you have here.
`Now, we understand that in the 319 institution decision there were
`a couple of claims there where the Board addressed a claim construction of
`the term "API" or I guess the whole term is application-specific interface
`(API). And the Board indicated that that needed to be -- you needed to show
`that the data was formatted for a particular application. Petitioners had
`indicated that that API, that acronym that was attached to the phrase
`"application-specific interface" meant that that term was intended to be the
`commonly understood phrase application-specific interface.
`There has been -- you know, we look at that construction as a
`preliminary construction. There has been significant evidence to change that
`preliminary construction, most notably the fact that patent owner in its own
`documents indicated, referred to that term as an application programming
`interface. It spelled it out. And then Valencell's expert himself agreed that
`an application-specific interface, as used in the patent, would have been
`understood by a person of skill in the art to be the same as the well known
`phrase application programming interface.
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