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9 Yale J.L. & Tech. 1 (2006-2007)

handle is hein.journals/yjolt9 and id is 1 raw text is: PATENTLY NON-OBVIOUS II: EXPERIMENTAL STUDY
ON THE HINDSIGHT ISSUE BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT
IN KSR v. TELEFLEX
GREGORY MANDEL*
ABSTRACT
For the first time in thirty years, the Supreme Court will consider the
core patent requirement that an invention be non-obvious. At the heart of
the case lies the challenge of how to insulate non-obvious decisions from
the distortion of the hindsight bias.  This Article reports the latest
empirical studies in a line of hindsight research, which present
experimental data bearing directly on the issue before the Court: how
individuals make non-obvious decisions under existing Supreme Court
and Federal Circuit precedent.
The study results indicate that the Federal Circuit's suggestion,
teaching, or motivation requirement, the precedent challenged before the
Supreme Court in KSR v. Teleflex, does not produce erroneous non-
obvious outcomes. This result contradicts the claims of the petitioners in
KSR and other critics of the suggestion requirement. On the other hand,
the results do not demonstrate that the suggestion test ameliorates the
hindsight bias in the manner usually claimed by its supporters. An
additional study indicates that the Supreme Court's Graham framework
does not resolve the hindsight problem either. Given the substantial and
confirmed prejudicial effect of the hindsight bias, the Article concludes
that the suggestion test should be retained for several reasons: it does
not appear to cause the harms hypothesized by its critics, it potentially
reduces the hindsight bias for complex technology inventions, and the
problem the test confronts (erroneous decisions that an invention is
obvious in hindsight) is known and significant while the problem the test
is alleged to create (over-compensation for the hindsight bias) is
unconfirmed and conjectural.
The Article concludes with a recommendation for bifurcating the non-
obvious decision at the Patent and Trademark Office. Combined with an
earlier proposal for jury trials, these recommendations present the only
known means for eliminating the hindsight effect and producing patent
decisions that comport with the Patent Act and Supreme Court precedent.
* © 2006 Gregory N. Mandel. Associate Dean for Research & Scholarship and Professor
of Law, Albany Law School. I am grateful to the participants of the Intellectual Property
Scholars Conference at Boalt Hall-Berkeley Law School, the Conference on Empirical
Legal Studies at the University of Texas School of Law, Patent Law: Recent Development
and Proposals for Reform at Santa Clara School of Law, and the Intellectual Property
Colloquium at the University of Arizona College of Law for their helpful comments.

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