February 11, 2020

Artificial Intelligence at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board

Since the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) released its 2019 Revised Patent Subject Matter Eligibility Guidance, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) has published over 50 decisions that apply the Guidance to artificial intelligence (AI)-related inventions. Included in those decisions is Ex parte Hannun (Appeal No. 2018-003323), a decision recently designated by PTAB as being “informative” and that applies the Guidance to find claims involving AI to be patent-eligible under 35 U.S.C. § 101. This update reviews the Hannun decision and summarizes findings and insights, from analyzing each of the published Board decisions that have applied the Guidance thus far to AI-related inventions.

In short, Board panels have found patent eligibility in approximately only 20% of decisions applying the Guidance to claims reciting AI-related features. These decisions provide helpful insight into strategies for drafting and successfully prosecuting applications to issuance for AI inventions.

Ex Parte Hannun

The claims at issue in Hannun involved a method for speech recognition using a trained neural network. The examiner asserted that the claims recited a mathematical relationship/formula, certain methods of organizing human activity and a mental process. The representative claim recited:

  • A computer-implemented method for transcribing speech comprising:
    • Receiving an input audio from a user
    • Normalizing the input audio to make a total power of the input audio consistent with a set of training samples used to Train a trained neural network model
    • Generating a jitter set of audio files from the normalized input audio by translating the normalized input audio by one or more time values
  • For each audio file from the jitter set of audio files, which includes the normalized input audio:
    • Generating a set of spectrogram frames for each audio file
    • Inputting the audio file along with a context of spectrogram frames into a trained neural network
    • Obtaining predicted character probabilities outputs from the trained neural network
    • Decoding a transcription of the input audio using the predicted character probabilities outputs from the trained neural network constrained by a language model that interprets a string of characters from the predicted character probabilities outputs as a word or words.

In reviewing the representative claim, PTAB applied the USPTO’s Guidance, under which the USPTO has created two prongs for applying step one of the Supreme Court’s current patent-eligibility test.

Applying Prong 1 of the Guidance, PTAB noted that the claimed steps cannot “practically be performed mentally,” so the claim is not directed to a mental process. For example, PTAB found that steps such as normalizing an input file, generating a jitter set of audio files and obtaining predicted character probabilities from a trained neural network were not mental processes. Further, the claims did not recite steps for organizing human behavior because the claims did not feature “fundamental economic principles or practices, commercial or legal interactions, managing personal behavior or relationships or interactions between people.” Finally, the mathematical algorithm or formula described in the specification was not itself recited in the claims.

Applying Prong 2 of the Guidance, PTAB found that the claims included other features that “integrate the judicial exception into a practical application.” In particular, PTAB found that the claims recited “specific features” of transcription that were “specifically designed to achieve an improved technological result.” This finding was based in part on the specification’s description that a trained neural network “achieves higher performance than traditional methods on hard speech recognition tasks while also being much simpler.”

Under step two of the Supreme Court’s patent eligibility test, PTAB found that the examiner simply failed to provide sufficient evidence to support the assertions under this step.

Data and Practice Pointers

Board panels that have applied the Guidance to AI-related inventions have reversed approximately only 20% of patent eligibility rejections under 35 U.S.C § 101.

Over 50% of the reversals found that the claims were patent-eligible under Prong 1 of the Guidance. This shows the importance of focusing on this portion of the Guidance and submitting arguments that show that the claims are not directed to mathematical relationship/formula, certain methods of organizing human activity or mental processes.

For claims asserted to recite mathematical concepts, PTAB sided with appellants when mathematical concepts were not explicitly recited in the claims — regardless of whether the specification disclosed mathematical equations. As noted in the Hannun decision, under the Guidance, the claims should not be rejected if the mathematical algorithm or formula described in the specification is not specifically recited in the claims.

For claims asserted to recite certain methods of organizing human behavior, appellants were successful in reversing rejections by showing how the claims did not involve fundamental economic principles or practices, commercial or legal interactions, or managing personal behavior, relationships or interactions between people. For example, in Ex Parte Adjaoute (Appeal No. 2018-007443), the appellant successfully argued that the examiner had read the claim features too broadly or otherwise ignored the AI-specific features. Agreeing with the appellant, PTAB found that the claimed “monitoring the operation of machines…using neural networks, logic decision trees, confidence assessments, fuzzy logic, smart agent profiling, and case-based reasoning” was not a fundamental economic principle.

For claims asserted to recite mental processes, PTAB sided with appellants when it was shown that the recited features could not be “practically” performed mentally. For example, in Ex Parte Carter (Appeal No. 2018-007242), PTAB found that “statistically identifying a logic problem in input text, as a practical matter, reasonably could not be performed entirely in a human’s mind.” As another example, PTAB in Ex parte Markram (Appeal No. 2018-008166) found that a “neural network device implemented in hardware or in a combination of hardware and software” and comprising “a collection of [interconnected] node assemblies” is not a mental process. PTAB pointed to the specifications to support their findings in both cases.

Approximately 30% of the reversals found that the claims were patent-eligible under Prong 2 of the Guidance. Successful arguments under Prong 2 included showing how the problem being solved by the claimed invention was addressed by “specifically using several artificial intelligence classification technologies” or “a machine learning application that included specific steps….” Other successful arguments under Prong 2 included showing how the problem being solved by the claimed invention was “rooted in computer technology and did not exist prior in the pre-Internet world” per the Federal Circuit’s decision in DDR Holdings LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P.

For reversals under step two of the patent eligibility test, PTAB typically found that the examiner simply failed to follow the USPTO’s Berkheimer guidance for establishing additional elements as being well-understood, routine or conventional.

Summary

As highlighted by Hannun and other Board decisions, AI-related inventions are more likely to be found patent-eligible at the USPTO when the claims do not explicitly recite mathematical formulas and instead recite AI-related features that are technologically-specific and that cannot practically be replicated in one’s mind.

The material contained in this communication is informational, general in nature and does not constitute legal advice. The material contained in this communication should not be relied upon or used without consulting a lawyer to consider your specific circumstances. This communication was published on the date specified and may not include any changes in the topics, laws, rules or regulations covered. Receipt of this communication does not establish an attorney-client relationship. In some jurisdictions, this communication may be considered attorney advertising.

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