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  1. Nov 7, 2017 · Specifically, we defined and quantified the central novelty of a patented invention as the additive inverse of the median $z$-score in the distribution and its extreme novelty as the additive inverse of the minimum $z$-score in the distribution.

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  2. Aug 24, 2023 · Explore patentability criteria, including novelty, non-obviousness, and utility, with clear examples to help you protect your innovative ideas.

  3. Sep 29, 2020 · This chapter examines the novelty and inventiveness criteria for synthetic biology patents in Europe and highlights their pivotal role. Indeed, even though their impact is often underestimated, novelty and inventiveness objections were ubiquitous in the examined...

  4. Novelty and Inventive Step. 6.1 Introduction. To obtain a patent for a synthetic biology invention, applicants will need to fulfil further requirements in addition to the ones set in Article 52(2) and 53 EPC. The two most relevant ones are the novelty and inventiveness criteria detailed in Article 54 and 56 EPC.

  5. Apr 9, 2018 · During the course of the patenting process to protect a new invention, one may require a patentability search (also known as a novelty search) in order to determine whether the new invention is new (novel) and arguably inventive in view of the prior art.

  6. Novelty and prior art. For your idea to be regarded as an invention, at least one significant part of its technology must be completely novel (that is, new). There must be no evidence that this novel aspect of your idea has ever been described before, or used for the same purpose before.

  7. Aug 24, 2018 · whether there is a distinction to be drawn between determining the ‘claimed features’ of the claims of a patent (for the purposes of assessing novelty and infringement) and determining the ‘inventive concepts’ of the invention in the patent (for the purpose of assessing inventiveness)?