Interference No. 103,587 Katayama’s Position Katayama’s argument in opposition is that its application supports claims 32-41 as follows. In highlight regions, the great majority of pixels are white. If the image is processed using error diffusion alone, black pixels are entirely surrounded by white pixels and ma y be in small clusters (e.g., two or three black pixels adjacent to each other as in KX-4, which illustrates an image produced by error diffusion processing of the prior art). When the Katayama invention is used, the highlight region changes in that small clusters of black pixels are broken up, such that the black pixels are separated from each other as in KX-5. Katayama concludes that when the first embodiment (Figs. 1-6) of its application is operating in a low-density highlight region, black dots are suppressed and separated, thus decreasing the numbers of dots in these sets of adjacent black dots. When this occurs, the numbers of dots in each of the neighboring sets of adjacent white dots are also changed. In the converse case, i.e., when the first embodiment is operating in a high density black region, black dots are caused to be printed and white dots are separated, thus decreasing the numbers of dots in those sets of adjacent white dots. When this occurs, the numbers of dots in the sets of adjacent black dots defined between the several white dots are also changed. It is urged that in either case, the recitation that the “size of the plurality of dots is determined” is clearly supported by the circuitry of the first embodiment of the Katayama application because the numbers of dots in the sets of adjacent white or black dots change as a result of the operation of that circuitry. Katayama argues that the production of “variable size dots” in its claims 53 and 55 means the same thing as “determining the size of pluralities of dots” and, therefore, that these claims are 10Page: Previous 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007