Writing an invention disclosure

Abstract

Several kinds of written invention disclosure are described and a checklist of their contents (e.g., date of conception, functional description, drawing) is developed. The patentability search disclosure is discussed in particular. In general, disclosures should provide a concise description of the invention, identifying its field of technology, describing its major parts, and telling how it works; state what the inventor believes to be the novel feature and why it is an improvement; clearly label significant parts in an uncluttered drawing; and provide patent or other references to similar or related inventions. Disclosures should not ignore principles or good technical writing; encompass more than one invention or include extraneous material.

Journal
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
Published
1979-06-01
DOI
10.1109/tpc.1979.6500291
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