TIPS AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR SEARCHING ON-LINE

 

 

The United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) maintains an extensive website (www.uspto.gov) which includes a text-searchable database of all Patents issued since approximately 1974.  Patents from any year can be downloaded as images and printed from your computer.

The Patent Office uses a special image file format which is a European version of the TIFF file format.  In order to view image documents, you will first have to download the TIFF driver and install it in your computer.  A free version of the TIFF driver can be found at: www.alternatiff.com

The advanced Boolean search page of the Patent Office can be found at:

http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/search-adv.htm

Scroll down this page to view field definitions.  If you are familiar with text searching engines at all, as well as Boolean operators (e.g., AND, OR, NOT, etc.) you’ll have no trouble using this “advanced” search page.  The search engine can handle some fairly complex search requests.

Once you have found a relevant patent, you can view the patent text by clicking on the patent number.  Click on the “IMAGES” icon to view the whole image of the patent, one page at a time.

Each patent is classified in a class and subclass.  Once you have found one relevant patent, you can search that entire class or subclass by using the class identifier field searches (e.g., CCL/365/73 to search class 365 subclass 73).  You can AND or OR these with text search words or with other classes.

EXAMPLE SEARCH

 

Suppose we want to look for a patent for an automatic dog water dish filling device

 

We might search on the terms DOG and DISH and WATER and AUTOMATIC as shown at the right here.

 

Note that we have reset the “Select Years” indicator to “All Years”.  This is very important as otherwise your search will encompass only recent years.

 

Unfortunately, the initial search results produce a large number of irrelevant patents.  We need to narrow our field of search.  One way is to look for certain words only in the TITLE (TTL/) or Abstract (ABST/).  By ANDing our original search with “and TTL/DOG”, we narrow the scope of the search considerably – perhaps too narrow!

 

 

 

 

This narrowed search now gives us three relevant Patents.  However, our search need not end here.  Once you find one relevant Patent, it will lead you to others in at least two ways.

 

If we have successfully loaded the AlternaTIFF driver, we can download one of these patents, page by page and review it for relevancy.

 

 

 

 

 

If we look at the first Patent in this list, we see that it  was classified in class 119 subclass 51.11.  We also see that a number of references were cited during prosecution of this patent.  We can download these references by using the search modifier “PN/” and then the patent number desired, without the commas.  We can also perform a class/subclass search on the class this Patent was classifed in.  We can also AND or OR or NOT any classification with any combination  of words.

 

To search by class and subclass of this patent we would enter “CCL/119.51.11”.

 

To find the first Patent cited in this Patent, we would enter “PN/3587530”.  Remember to select “all years” or you may get a “not found” error!

 

As you can see, the process is endless, although you’ll probably find the most relevant references early on.

 

 

 

The Patent Office Search site has an easy-to use help page for different field modifiers.  Just scroll down from the main Advanced Boolean Search Page, and click on the filed modifier to see how it works.

 

 

Field Code

Field Name

 

Field Code

Field Name

PN

Patent Number

IN

Inventor Name

ISD

Issue Date

IC

Inventor City

TTL

Title

IS

Inventor State

ABST

Abstract

ICN

Inventor Country

ACLM

Claim(s)

LREP

Attorney or Agent

SPEC

Description/Specification

AN

Assignee Name

CCL

Current US Classification

AC

Assignee City

ICL

International Classification

AS

Assignee State

APN

Application Serial Number

ACN

Assignee Country

APD

Application Date

EXP

Primary Examiner

PARN

Parent Case Information

EXA

Assistant Examiner

RLAP

Related US App. Data

REF

Referenced By

REIS

Reissue Data

FREF

Foreign References

PRIR

Foreign Priority

OREF

Other References

PCT

PCT Information

GOVT

Government Interest

APT

Application Type

 

 

 

 

 

In the space provided here, I cannot give you every search tip imaginable.  I can only say that the more you search, the better you’ll get at it.

 

There is no requirement that you perform a Prior Art search.  If you do, be sure to cite all relevant references to the United States Patent Office when you file your application.  If a reference is irrelevant, discard it.  The worse thing you can do is keep uncited, irrelevant references in your personal Patent files.  See my Article on Patent File Hygiene for more information.

 

 

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