--- name: patent-novelty-check description: "Assess patent novelty and non-obviousness against prior art. Use when user says \"专利查新\", \"patent novelty\", \"可专利性评估\", \"patentability check\", or wants to evaluate if an invention is patentable." argument-hint: [invention-description-or-brief-path] allowed-tools: Bash(*), Read, Write, Edit, Grep, Glob, Agent, WebSearch, WebFetch, mcp__codex__codex --- # Patent Novelty and Non-Obviousness Check Assess patentability of: **$ARGUMENTS** Adapted from `/novelty-check` for patent legal standards. Research novelty is NOT the same as patent novelty. ## Constants - `REVIEWER_MODEL = gpt-5.4` — Model used via Codex MCP for cross-model examiner verification - `NOVELTY_STANDARD = patent` — Always use legal patentability standard, not research contribution standard ## Inputs 1. Invention description from `$ARGUMENTS` 2. `patent/PRIOR_ART_REPORT.md` (output of `/prior-art-search`) 3. `patent/INVENTION_BRIEF.md` if exists ## Shared References Load `../shared-references/patent-writing-principles.md` for novelty/non-obviousness standards. Load `../shared-references/patent-format-us.md` for 102/103 analysis framework. ## Workflow ### Step 1: Define Claim Elements From the invention description, extract the key claim elements that would define the invention's scope: 1. List the technical features that make the invention novel 2. Identify which features are known from prior art vs. inventive 3. Draft preliminary claim language for 2-3 independent claims (method + system) ### Step 2: Anticipation Analysis (Novelty) For each preliminary claim, test against EACH prior art reference in `PRIOR_ART_REPORT.md`: **Single-reference test**: Does any single reference disclose ALL claim elements? | Claim Element | Ref 1 | Ref 2 | Ref 3 | ... | |--------------|-------|-------|-------|-----| | Feature A | Yes/No + evidence | | | | | Feature B | Yes/No + evidence | | | | | Feature C | Yes/No + evidence | | | | | Feature D | Yes/No + evidence | | | | **Verdict per reference**: - ANTICIPATED: One reference discloses every element → claim is not novel - NOT ANTICIPATED: At least one element missing from every single reference → claim is novel ### Step 3: Obviousness Analysis (Inventive Step) If the invention is novel (passes Step 2), test for obviousness: **Two/three-reference combination test**: Can 2-3 references be combined to render the claim obvious? For each combination of the top references: 1. **Primary reference**: Which reference is closest to the claimed invention? 2. **Secondary reference(s)**: Which reference(s) teach the missing element(s)? 3. **Motivation to combine**: Would a POSITA have reason to combine these references? - Explicit suggestion in the references themselves? - Same field, same problem? - Common design incentive? - Known technique for improving similar devices? Format as a matrix: | Combination | Primary | Secondary | Missing Elements | Motivation to Combine | Obvious? | |-------------|---------|-----------|-----------------|----------------------|----------| | Ref1 + Ref2 | Ref1 | Ref2 | Feature D | Same field, similar problem | Yes/No | ### Step 4: Cross-Model Examiner Verification Call `REVIEWER_MODEL` via `mcp__codex__codex` with xhigh reasoning: ``` mcp__codex__codex: config: {"model_reasoning_effort": "xhigh"} prompt: | You are a senior patent examiner at the [USPTO/CNIPA/EPO]. Examine the following invention for patentability. INVENTION: [invention description + preliminary claims] PRIOR ART: [prior art references with key teachings] Please analyze: 1. Anticipation (novelty): Does any single reference anticipate any claim? 2. Obviousness: Can any combination of references render claims obvious? 3. Claim scope: Are the claims broad enough to be valuable? 4. Recommended amendments if any claim is rejected. Be rigorous and cite specific references. ``` ### Step 5: Jurisdiction-Specific Assessment For each target jurisdiction, provide a patentability assessment: **Under 35 USC 102/103 (US)**: - Novelty: PASS / FAIL (cite specific reference if fail) - Non-obviousness: PASS / FAIL (cite combination if fail) **Under Article 22 CN Patent Law (CN)**: - 新颖性 (Novelty): 通过 / 未通过 - 创造性 (Inventive Step): 通过 / 未通过 **Under Article 54/56 EPC (EP)**: - Novelty: PASS / FAIL - Inventive step: PASS / FAIL (problem-solution approach) ### Step 6: Output Write `patent/NOVELTY_ASSESSMENT.md`: ```markdown ## Patentability Assessment ### Invention Summary [description] ### Overall Assessment [PATENTABLE / PATENTABLE WITH AMENDMENTS / NOT PATENTABLE] ### Anticipation Analysis [claim-by-claim matrix against each reference] ### Obviousness Analysis [combination analysis with motivation to combine] ### Cross-Model Examiner Review [summary of GPT-5.4 examiner feedback] ### Recommended Claim Amendments [If claims need modification to overcome prior art, suggest specific amendments] ### Risk Factors [What could cause rejection during actual prosecution?] ``` ## Key Rules - Patent novelty is absolute: any public disclosure before the priority date counts as prior art, worldwide. - Research novelty ("has anyone published this?") is NOT the same as patent novelty ("does any single reference teach every claim element?"). - Obviousness requires BOTH: (1) a combination of references AND (2) a motivation to combine them. - Never assume the invention is patentable just because no identical patent exists. - The assessment is advisory only -- actual prosecution may reveal different prior art. - If `mcp__codex__codex` is not available, skip cross-model examiner review and note it in the output.