On October 7, 2024, a federal
judge ruled against Wave Neuroscience in its suit alleging patent
infringement against PeakLogic, resulting in the invalidation of
the asserted claims of two of Wave Neuroscience's patents. Judge
Bencivengo granted summary judgment for PeakLogic holding that the
asserted claims of the '259 patent and '554 patent were
invalid.
DEL MAR,
Calif., Nov. 2, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- On
October 7, 2024, a federal judge
ruled against Wave Neuroscience in its suit alleging patent
infringement against PeakLogic, resulting in the invalidation of
the asserted claims of two of Wave Neuroscience's patents. Judge
Bencivengo granted summary judgment for PeakLogic holding that the
asserted claims of the '259 patent and '554 patent were
invalid.
The Court granted PeakLogic's motion to invalidate the asserted
claims of Wave's '259 patent holding that the claimed method
"describes nothing more than the natural phenomenon that a brain's
intrinsic frequency can be altered by external stimuli and provides
no significant instruction beyond claiming that it can be
implemented to treat a patient with a brain disorder" and that
"there is no inventive concept disclosed in the method."
Similarly, the Court granted PeakLogic's motion to invalidate
the asserted claims of Wave '554 patent holding that the claimed
methods "describe nothing more than the natural phenomenon that a
brain's intrinsic frequency can be altered by external stimuli and
provide no significant instruction regarding how it can be
implemented to treat a patient with depression" and that "there is
no inventive concept disclosed in the methods."
With respect to the remaining '354 patent, the Court denied the
motion, holding that while the asserted claims are "directed to
ineligible subject matter," there are material facts in dispute as
to whether the asserted claims "involve more than performance of
well understood, routine and conventional activities previously
known to a person of skill in the relevant field at the time the
patent was filed."
PeakLogic remains confident that it will again prevail with
regards to the remaining patent. Dr. Kevin
T. Murphy, CEO of PeakLogic, commented, "Although this is an
obvious win for our company, it's an even bigger win for physicians
striving to personalize medicine for their patients."
Please read Court filings: Wave Neuroscience, Inc. v. PeakLogic,
Inc., 21cv1330-CAB-SBC | Casetext Search + Citator
Media Contact
C. Christie Criag, Team C3, 1
3107810007, thechristiecraig@gmail.com, https://teamc3.agency
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SOURCE Team C3