FedInvent™ Patents

New Taxpayer Funded Patents for Tuesday, September 09, 2008 

This page was updated on Monday, March 27, 2023 at 12:59 AM GMT

FedInvent analyzed 55 taxpayer-funded patents this week.

On Tuesday, September 09, 2008, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) granted 55 taxpayer-funded patents; including 47 patents containing government interest statements and 11 patents where federal government agencies were an assignee or applicant. Together, 55 patents granted this week are the result of US government-funded research & development.

Learn More About Taxpayer Funded Patents Here

The List of This Week's Patents

Just a list — patent number with a link and the title, for those patentistas who like to browse.

About The Icons On the List Below

  • The icon takes you to the full text version of the patent at USPTO;
  • The icon takes you to the PDF version of the patent at USPTO; and
  • The icon takes you to the details about the patent on the FedInvent Details page.
  • When you use the icon the patent you are interested appears at the top of the list on the details page.
Patent Title
001 07421751
 
Folding knife having locking portion, clip portion and unsharpened protrusion 
002 07421910
 
Strain sensitive coax cable sensors for monitoring structures 
003 07421924
 
Apparatus for raising or tilting a micromechanical structure 
004 07421934
 
Mortar tube for training 
005 07421936
 
Systems and methods for explosive blast wave mitigation 
006 07422102
 
Container for ammunition 
007 07422175
 
Apparatus and method for cooperative multi target tracking and interception 
008 07422178
 
Non-threaded structural insert for component attachment 
009 07422187
 
Support stand 
010 07422368
 
CT scanner with tripod base 
011 07422601
 
Method for inducing hypothermia 
012 07422669
 
Microfluidic device and method for focusing, segmenting, and dispensing of a fluid stream 
013 07422671
 
Non-line-of-sight process for coating complexed shaped structures 
014 07422696
 
Multicomponent nanorods 
015 07422701
 
Oxidation resistant organic hydrogen getters 
016 07422724
 
Biological preconcentrator 
017 07422747
 
Transgenic plant-based vaccines 
018 07422751
 
Epstein-barr-virus-specific immunization 
019 07422755
 
Antimultiorganism glycoconjugate vaccine 
020 07422766
 
Method of fabrication of high power density solid oxide fuel cells 
021 07422812
 
Solid-oxide fuel cell system having a thermally-regulated cathode air heat exchanger 
022 07422819
 
Ceramic coatings for insulating modular fuel cell cassettes in a solid-oxide fuel cell stack 
023 07422856
 
Methods for modulating transcriptional activation using mint proteins 
024 07422857
 
Detection of polyketide synthetase gene expression in Karenia brevis 
025 07422860
 
Optoelectronic detection system 
026 07422862
 
Methods for identifying modulators of apoptosis 
027 07422871
 
Uropathogenic E. coli D-serine detoxification operon 
028 07422892
 
Enzyme-based device for environmental monitoring 
029 07422893
 
Apparatus for growing cells under variable hydrostatic pressures 
030 07422900
 
System and method for forming a connective tissue construct 
031 07423008
 
Derivatives of mithramycin and methods of making and uses thereof 
032 07423066
 
Methods, compounds, and compositions for reducing body fat and modulating fatty acid metabolism 
033 07423068
 
Control of parasitic mites of honey bees 
034 07423133
 
Fluorescent glycosides and methods for their use 
035 07423143
 
Nucleic acid labeling compounds 
036 07423155
 
N-sulfonyldicarboximide containing tethering compounds 
037 07423160
 
Boron complexation strategy for use in manipulating 1-acyldipyrromethanes 
038 07423164
 
Synthesis of ionic liquids 
039 07423194
 
Animal models for demyelination disorders 
040 07423231
 
Organizing a plurality of items into a delivery point sequence 
041 07423265
 
Near-field aperture having a fractal iterate shape 
042 07423286
 
Laser transfer article and method of making 
043 07423352
 
Vibration damping method for variable speed wind turbines 
044 07423427
 
Arbitrarily accurate composite pulse sequences 
045 07423430
 
Adaptive parallel acquisition and reconstruction of dynamic MR images 
046 07423492
 
Circuit to reset a phase locked loop after a loss of lock 
047 07423763
 
Faster processing of multiple spatially-heterodyned direct to digital holograms 
048 07423931
 
Acoustic system for communication in pipelines 
049 07424029
 
Stochastic unified multiple access to a communications channel 
050 07424192
 
Frequency conversion with nonlinear optical polymers and high index contrast waveguides 
051 07424369
 
Physical-chemical property based sequence motifs and methods regarding same 
052 07424375
 
Tidal seepage meter 
053 07424427
 
Systems and methods for classifying audio into broad phoneme classes 
054 07424619
 
System and methods for anomaly detection and adaptive learning 
055 RE40494
 
Chromosome-specific staining to detect genetic rearrangements associated with chromosome 3 and/or chromosome 17 

Up to Start Of Table

Patent Count By Department

This is the count of taxpayer-funded patents granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) this week. These patents contain a Government Interest Statement in the body of the patent document or are patents where the government is an assignee. Agency numbers are aggregated by the agency named in the Government Interests Statement and the contract number cited in the government interest section of the patent.

Department This Week This Year
Department of Defense (DOD) 21 994
Department of Energy (DOE) 13 427
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) 10 788
National Science Foundation (NSF) 7 278
Department of Commerce (DOC) 2 67
Department of Agriculture (USDA) 1 54
National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA) 1 12
United States Postal Service (USPS) 1 14
Government Rights Acknowledged 3 62

Patents By Funding Agency

FedInvent Patents are patents funded by US taxpayers. Taxpayer-funded patents have Government Interest Statements in the body of the patent or are patents where an agency of the US federal government has retained the title to the patent and is listed as an assignee. The presence of a government interest statement, as required by the Bayh-Dole Act, indicates the holder of a federal contract, grant, or cooperative research agreement has elected to retain the title of inventions conceived and reduced to practice during that contract.

About The Icons On the List Below

  • The icon takes you to the full text version of the patent at USPTO;
  • The icon takes you to the PDF version of the patent at USPTO; and
  • The icon takes you to the details about the patent on the FedInvent Details page.
  • When you use the icon the patent you are interested appears at the top of the list on the details page.

Click the Panel to See The Patents for Each Agency

Take Me To The Details

Department of Defense (DOD) Agencies

Patent Title
001 07421936
 
Systems and methods for explosive blast wave mitigation 

Department of the ARMY (DOA)

Patent Title
001 07421934
 
Mortar tube for training 
002 07422102
 
Container for ammunition 
003 07422747
 
Transgenic plant-based vaccines 
004 07423133
 
Fluorescent glycosides and methods for their use 
005 07423155
 
N-sulfonyldicarboximide containing tethering compounds 
006 07423286
 
Laser transfer article and method of making 

Department of the Navy (DON) | United States Marine Corps (USMC)

Patent Title
001 07421751
 
Folding knife having locking portion, clip portion and unsharpened protrusion 
002 07422175
 
Apparatus and method for cooperative multi target tracking and interception 
003 07422178
 
Non-threaded structural insert for component attachment 
004 07422187
 
Support stand 
005 07422671
 
Non-line-of-sight process for coating complexed shaped structures 
006 07422900
 
System and method for forming a connective tissue construct 
007 07424029
 
Stochastic unified multiple access to a communications channel 
008 07424375
 
Tidal seepage meter 

Department of the Air Force (DAF)| United States Space Force (USSF)

Patent Title
001 07422696
 
Multicomponent nanorods 
002 07422860
 
Optoelectronic detection system 
003 07424192
 
Frequency conversion with nonlinear optical polymers and high index contrast waveguides 
004 07424427
 
Systems and methods for classifying audio into broad phoneme classes 
005 07424619
 
System and methods for anomaly detection and adaptive learning 

Up to Start Of Table

Emerging Technology

Emerging Climate Change Technologies

Patents containing 'Y" CPC symbols indicate emerging climate change and clean technology inventions.

About The Icons On the List Below

  • The icon takes you to the full text version of the patent at USPTO;
  • The icon takes you to the PDF version of the patent at USPTO; and
  • The icon takes you to the details about the patent on the FedInvent Details page.
  • When you use the icon the patent you are interested appears at the top of the list on the details page.
Class

About Y Emerging Technology Symbols

Patent documents that contain a Y02 or Y04 CPC symbol are already classified elsewhere. USPTO adds the Y symbols to the classification data to monitor new technological developments covering clean technology and inventions impacting climate change, important American science and technology interests.

Y02 — Green House Gas Mitigation

Y02 covers selected technologies, that control, reduce, or prevent anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG), in the framework of the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement, and technologies that allow adapting to the adverse effects of climate change. Y02A covers technologies for adaptation to climate change, — technologies that allow adapting to the adverse effects of climate change in human, industrial (including agriculture and livestock), and economic activities. Y02P covers climate change mitigation technologies in any kind of industrial processing or production activity, including the agroalimentary industry (relating to agriculture and food), agriculture, fishing, ranching and the like.

Y04 — Enabling Technologies

Y04 is focused on the information and communications inventions that facilitate climate change technology. Y04S covers systems integrating technologies related to power network operation, communication, or information technologies for improving electrical power generation, transmission, distribution, management, or usage. Examples of the art covered here are technologies related to smart grids, home appliances, and systems supporting the interoperability of electric or hybrid vehicles.

The Health Complex

This section contains the count of patents funded by The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) organized by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) institute; and HHS subagencies including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Center for Disease Control (CDC), and others. These agencies together are called the Health Complex.

Department | Agency This Week This Year
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)10788
National Institutes of Health (NIH)9706
National Cancer Institute (NCI)285
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)116

Up to Start Of Table

Higher Education Research and Development (HERD)

FedInvent follows the HERD the Higher Education Research and Development institutions — the colleges and universities; research institutions, and medical schools that benefit from federal funding and rely on it to make important discoveries that drive American innovation. Taxpayer-funded patents coming from American and sometimes foreign universities are an important indicia of the vitality of the American innovation ecosphere.

MEMBERS OF THE HERD

The National Science Foundation (NSF) Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) Survey is the primary source of information on R&D expenditures at 916 US colleges and universities that expended at least $150,000 in separately accounted for R&D in the fiscal year. We use the NSF list to keep track of which colleges and universities are receiving taxpayer-funded patents and filing patent applications.

WATCH This SPACE

We're working on our data analytics and will be reporting taxpayer-funded patents and patent applications shortly. In the meantime, FedInvent will post interesting information about the HERD Innovation Ecosphere here.

Top Ten Universities By R&D Expenditures
  1. Johns Hopkins University
  2. University of Michigan
  3. University of Washington
  4. University of California, San Diego
  5. University of California, San Francisco
  6. Columbia University in the City of New York
  7. Stanford University
  8. University Pittsburgh
  9. University Pennsylvania
  10. Duke University

Count By Tech Center

Patents organized by count and Technology Center where the patent was examined.

Tech Center Count
1600 Biotechnology and Organic Chemistry 21
2800 Semiconductors, Electrical and Optical Systems and Components 12
1700 Chemical and Materials Engineering 9
3600 Transportation, Electronic Commerce, Construction, Agriculture, Licensing and Review 7
2600 Communications 2
3700 Mechanical Engineering, Manufacturing, Gaming and Medical Devices/Processes 2
2100 Computer Architecture Software and Information Security 1
4100 Patent Training Academy 1

For more information on the types of inventions examined in each Technology Center, see the About Tech Centers section of this page.

Patents By Scientific Domain.

This section contains the number of patents by high level scientific and technical domain. The data is arranged by the first Cooperative Patent Classification System (CPC) patent symbol assigned to the patent. This indicates the scope and nature of the invention for a patent or a patent application.

Global patent offices use patent classification as their lingua franca — the common language — for exchanging information about inventions and what scientific and technical art a patent contains. The classifications assigned to a patent are used by patent examiners to find prior art and to determine if a particular patent's claims are novel. Patent classifications are also used for global enforcement of patent rights, treaties, and agreements.

Class Class Definition First
(Original)
Inventive
(CrossRef)
USPC 435 Chemistry: Molecular biology and microbiology 9 0
USPC 424 Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions 3 0
USPC 514 Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions 3 0
USPC 089 Ordnance 2 0
USPC 204 Chemistry: Electrical and wave energy 2 0
USPC 244 Aeronautics and astronautics 2 0
USPC 324 Electricity: Measuring and testing 2 0
USPC 429 Chemistry: Electrical current producing apparatus, product, and process 2 0
USPC 536 Organic compounds 2 0
USPC 702 Data processing: Measuring, calibrating, or testing 2 0
USPC 007 Compound tools 1 0
USPC 073 Measuring and testing 1 0
USPC 074 Machine element or mechanism 1 0
USPC 206 Special receptacle or package 1 0
USPC 209 Classifying, separating, and assorting solids 1 0
USPC 216 Etching a substrate: Processes 1 0
USPC 248 Supports 1 0
USPC 250 Radiant energy 1 0
USPC 252 Compositions 1 0
USPC 257 Active solid-state devices 1 0
USPC 290 Prime-mover dynamo plants 1 0
USPC 331 Oscillators 1 0
USPC 356 Optics: Measuring and testing 1 0
USPC 367 Communications, electrical: Acoustic wave systems and devices 1 0
USPC 370 Multiplex communications 1 0
USPC 378 X-ray or gamma ray systems or devices 1 0
USPC 385 Optical waveguides 1 0
USPC 422 Chemical apparatus and process disinfecting, deodorizing, preserving, or sterilizing 1 0
USPC 427 Coating processes 1 0
USPC 546 Organic compounds 1 0
USPC 548 Organic compounds 1 0
USPC 556 Organic compounds 1 0
USPC 607 Surgery: Light, thermal, and electrical application 1 0
USPC 704 Data processing: Speech signal processing, linguistics, language translation, and audio compression/decompression 1 0
USPC 713 Electrical computers and digital processing systems: Support 1 0
USPC 800 Multicellular living organisms and unmodified parts thereof and related processes 1 0

Up to Start Of Table

Count of Inventors by Country and U.S. State

Patent count by country and state based on the location information of first named inventors and of all inventors on the patent.

Country First Named Inventors All Inventors
United States of America 54 161
India 1 1
Spain 0 5
Finland 0 2
Japan 0 2
U.S. State First Named Inventors All Inventors
California 13 31
Massachusetts 5 22
New York 5 18
Illinois 5 15
Minnesota 3 9
Texas 3 7
Tennessee 3 6
Michigan 2 9
Pennsylvania 2 6
Maryland 2 4
New Mexico 2 4
Connecticut 1 6
North Carolina 1 4
Arizona 1 3
Kentucky 1 3
Missouri 1 3
New Jersey 1 3
Florida 1 2
Wisconsin 1 2
Virginia 1 1
Washington 0 2
New Hampshire 0 1

Up to Start Of Table

Count of Assignees and Applicants by Country and U.S. State

Patent count by country and state based on location information of Assignees and Applicants.

Country Assignees Applicants
United States of America 560
France 10
U.S. State Assignees Applicants
California 110
District of Columbia 90
Illinois 50
Massachusetts 50
Michigan 40
New York 40
Tennessee 30
Minnesota 20
New Mexico 20
Pennsylvania 20
Connecticut 10
Florida 10
Kentucky 10
Maryland 10
Missouri 10
New Jersey 10
North Carolina 10
Texas 10
Wisconsin 10

Up to Start Of Table

Technology Center Explainer

How Tech Centers and Art Units Are Organized And Why It Matters

Patents travel from Technology Center to Art Unit to Group Art Unit to Patent Examiner.

The USPTO's patent corps is organized into Technology Centers (TCs), groups of patent examiners with specific scientific and technical domain expertise. Technology Centers are further divided into Art Units (AUs) organized by major types of inventive art within a scientific or technical domain. Art Units are organized into Group Art Units, even more specialized and granular teams of examiners.

Group Art Units (GAUs) are where patent examiners prosecute patent applications. Patent applications are docketed to examiners based on specific subject matter classifications of a particular GAU.

Understanding Technology Centers, Art Units, and Group Art Units helps you understand what type of inventions are being prosecuted within each scientific and technical domain, how long it takes from the date a patent application is filed to the time a final decision on the patentability of the invention is made.

Technology Centers and Art Units

Click or touch the accordion panel to open it and see the way different types of inventions are grouped together within Art Units.

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
1610 Organic Compounds: Bio-affecting, Body Treating, Drug Delivery, Steroids, Herbicides, Pesticides, Cosmetics, and Drugs
1620 Organic Chemistry
1630 Molecular Biology, Bioinformatics, Nucleic Acids, Recombinant DNA and RNA, Gene Regulation, Nucleic Acid Amplification, Animals and Plants, Combinatorial/ Computational Chemistry
1640 Immunology, Receptor/Ligands, Cytokines Recombinant Hormones, and Molecular Biology
1650 Fermentation, Microbiology, Isolated and Recombinant Proteins/Enzyme
1660 Plants

About Plant Patents

Plant Patents are granted to an inventor who has invented, or discovered and asexually reproduced a distinct and new variety of plant, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state. If you've ever eaten a pluot, you've enjoyed the fruit of a plant patent.

Plant patent numbers begin with a "PP" followed by a five digit number. The first Plant Patent was issued in 1931. Plant patents are valid for 20 years from the filing date.

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
1710 Coating, Etching, Cleaning, Single Crystal Growth
1720 Fuel Cells, Batteries, Solar Cells, Liquid Crystal Composition
1730 Metallurgy, Metal Working, Inorganic Chemistry, Catalysts, Electrophotography, Photolithography
1740 Tires, Adhesive Bonding, Glass/Paper making, Plastics Shaping & Molding
1760 Organic Chemistry, Polymers, Compositions
1770 Chemical Apparatus, Separation and Purification, Liquid and Gas Contact Apparatus
1780 Miscellaneous Articles, Stock Material, Adhesive Composition, Fabrics
1790 Food, Analytical Chemistry, Sterilization, Biochemistry, Electrochemistry

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
2110 Coating, Etching, Cleaning, Single Crystal Growth
2120 Miscellaneous Articles, Stock Material, Adhesive Composition, Fabrics
2130 Fuel Cells, Batteries, Solar Cells, Liquid Crystal Composition
2140/2170 Metallurgy, Metal Working, Inorganic Chemistry, Catalysts, Electrophotography, Photolithography
2150/2160 Tires, Adhesive Bonding, Glass/Paper making, Plastics Shaping & Molding
2180 Organic Chemistry, Polymers, Compositions
2190 Chemical Apparatus, Separation and Purification, Liquid and Gas Contact Apparatus

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
2410/2460/2470 Multiplex, VoIP
2420 Cable and Television
2430/2490 Cryptography and Security
2440/2450 Computer Networks
2480 Recording and Compression

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
2610 Computer Graphic Processing, 3D Animation, Display Color Attribute, Object Processing, Hardware and Memory
2620 Selective Visual Display Systems
2630 Digital and Optical Communications
2640 Telecommunications: Analog Radio Telephone; Satellite and Power Control; Transceivers, Measuring and Testing; Bluetooth; Receivers and Transmitters; Equipment Details
2650 Videophones and Telephonic Communications; Audio Signals; Digital Audio Data Processing; Linguistics, Speech Processing and Audio Compression
2660 Digital Cameras; Image Analysis; Applications; pattern Recognition; Color and Compression; Enhancement and Transformation
2670 Facsimile; Printer; Color; halftone; Scanner; Computer Graphic Processing; 3-D Animation; Display Color; Attributes; Object Processing; Hardware and Memory
2680 Telemetry and Code Generation; Vehicles and System Alarms; Selective Communication; Dynamic Storage Systems; Mechanical parts of Disk Drives; Signal Processing and Control Processing in Disk Drives
2690 Selective Visual Display Systems

More broadly TC 2800 Art Units cover Semiconductors/Memory, Circuits/Measuring and Testing, Optics/Photocopying, Printing/Measuring and Testing.

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
2810/2820/2890 Semiconductors/Memory
2830/2840 Electrical Circuits and Systems
2850/2860 Printing/Measuring and Testing
2870/2880 Optics

About Design Patents

The design FOR an article. Not to the design OF an article.

Patents examined here cover Design patents cover the appearance of an article. The design for an article consists of the visual characteristics embodied in or applied to an article. Since a design is manifested in appearance, the subject matter of a design patent application may relate to the configuration or shape of an article, to the surface ornamentation applied to an article, or to the combination of configuration and surface ornamentation.

Design is inseparable from the article to which it is applied and cannot exist alone merely as a scheme of surface ornamentation. It must be a definite, preconceived thing, capable of reproduction and not merely the chance result of a method.

Design patent numbers begin with a "D" followed by a six digit number. The first Design Patent was issued in 1843. The term of a design patent is 15 years measured from the date of grant, if the design application was filed on or after May 13, 2015 (or 14 years if filed before May 13, 2015).

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
3610 Surface Transportation
3620 Business Methods — Incentive Programs, Coupons; Operations Research; Electronic Shopping; Health Care; Point of Sale, Inventory, Accounting; Cost/Price, Reservations, Shipping and Transportation; Business Processing
3630 Static Structures, Supports and Furniture
3640 Aeronautics, Agriculture, Fishing, Trapping, Vermin Destroying, Plant and Animal Husbandry, Weaponry, Nuclear Systems, and License and Review
3650 Material and Article Handling
3660 Computerized Vehicle Controls and Navigation, Radio Wave, Optical and Acoustic Wave Communication, Robotics, and Nuclear Systems
3670 Wells, Earth Boring/Moving/Working, Excavating, Mining, Harvesters, Bridges, Roads, Petroleum, Closures, Connections, and Hardware
3680 Business Methods — Incentive Programs, Coupons; Electronic Shopping; Business Cryptography, Voting; Health Care; Point of Sale, Inventory, Accounting; Business Processing, Electronic Negotiation
3690 Business Methods — Finance/Banking/ Insurance

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
3710 Amusement and Education Devices
3720 Manufacturing Devices and Processes, Machine Tools and Hand Tools
3730 Sheet Container Making, Package Making, Receptacles, Shoes, Apparel, and Tool Driving or Impacting
3740 Thermal and Combustion Technology, Motive and Fluid Power Systems
3750 Fluid Handling and Dispensing
3760 Refrigeration, Vaporization, Ventilation, and Combustion
3770 Medical & Surgical Instruments, Treatment Devices, Surgery and Surgical Supplies
3780 Body Treatment, Kinestherapy, and Exercising

Patents examined here cover:

Art Unit Technical & Scientific Domains
3970 Express Abandonments
3990 Central Reexamination Unit

FedInvent Patents

Each week FedInvent analyzes newly granted patents and published patent applications whose origins lead back to funding from the US federal government. We assemble a weekly patent catalog and analyze the inventions, the inventors, and the entities who received the patents. We map the patents back to the agency that funded the R&D that led to the new invention. FedInvent uses the funding opportunity descriptions, the grants, and the contracts that define the research areas of interest, and the R&D policies and priorities of that drove and are driving the funding to organize each week's patents.

ABOUT OUR DATA

The weekly patent catalog includes patents with government interest statements indicating federal funding; and patents where the assignee, the owner of the invention, is the federal government. This includes work on federal grants, work on federal contracts, innovation by Federal Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs) funded by Federal Departments and University Affiliated Research Centers funded by DoD.

Not every inventor is a government contractor. There are many inventions conceived and patented by scientists and engineers working for the federal government or serving in the military.

THE NUMBERS MAY NOT MATCH THE NUMBER OF PATENTS WE ANALYZE EACH WEEK

The numbers in the tables presented on this page will not add up to the number of patents granted each week because patents are counted by each agency that funded the creation of the invention. Patents and funding have a many-to-many relationship. One patent may have more than one funding grant or contract associated with it. A grant or contract may lead to more than one patent. More than one agency may have funded the inventors or the contract. More than one university or business may have worked together on an invention. When we report the numbers here, we associate a patent with all of the entities and funding that are reflected on the patent and report them to you. This approach presents a more complete picture of what's going on in the federal innovation ecosphere. Put another way, the numbers in the tables presented on this page may not always add up to the number of patents each week because patents are counted by each agency that funded the creation of the invention.

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