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Intellectual property Class

Patents belong to class of property that is referred to as intellectual property. Intellectual property also includes trade secrets, trademarks, registered designs, and copyrights. [Pg.2604]

Chemical Reproducible activity between HTS assay and local laboratory assay Dose responsive activity Confirmed structural identity Purity established No evidence of compound class instability Tractable synthetic route established Favorable intellectual property and competitive assessment for compound class Demonstrated exploitable SAR... [Pg.99]

Patents are one of a class of intellectual property rights i.e. rights to intangible property. These are patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, and seeds. Each right differs from the others primarily in the type of property it protects, how it is obtained, and the length of protection ... [Pg.431]

In this step, we need to identify what features of our future system are required. In the case of inventive designing, requirements related to novelty may be particularly important and they may require that our designing must lead to a patent or a class of patents, which will become the intellectual property of our company. Similarly to the previous step dealing with constraints, our analysis of requirements should result in a requirements tree showing how these requirements are interrelated. [Pg.133]

Co-crystals represent a novel class of crystalline solids which possess scientific and regulatory advantages along with enormous intellectual property potential. In the earlier stages of pharmaceutical process development, an efficient cocrystal screening is essential in order to determine the different possible stoichiometries and the different polymorphic forms for each stoichiometry. When all the different phases are identified, the relative stability of the solid phases in solution has to be determined. This step requires the construction of the... [Pg.208]

Peter Stafford has delved into the literature on psychedelic substances and produced an account of the properties attributed to them, how they are prepared and used, and the shifting social attitudes that have been displayed towards them over the past half-century. He has drawn as well on his personal experiences with the agents he discusses and the experiences of people he has known and talked to. The result of this twin-pronged attack on the most perplexing intellectual problem and the most pervasive moral problem of the day— intellectual because of the difficulty in framing an adequate theory of the effect of psychedelic substances, moral because of their widespread use in contravention of the law— is a book which stands in a class by itself. [Pg.15]

The intellectual push to study mixed-valence complexes was provided by the publication in 1967 of two review articles, by Allen and Hush (2) and Robin and Day (3), on the physical properties of mixed-valence systems. These were followed by Hush s publication (4) of his theoretical model of intervalence transitions, which provided a link between the properties of mixed-valence complexes in solution and the Marcus theory of intermolecular electron transfer (5, 6). The review by Robin and Day classified mixed-valence complexes into three types class I,... [Pg.273]

The dynamic element of this process is external and internal trade, neither class struggle nor the development of the productive forces. This "neO Smithian" or proto-Hicksian theory of history is not usually associated with Marx. And it is of course only part of his theory. Yet, as I said, it is no less central than the better-known theory of the rise and fall of property right structures in accordance with their ability to promote the productive forces. Marx owes us an account of how these two views are to be welded into one coherent theory. Some links are readily discernible, and have been noted above. They do not, however, amount to a full integration of the two periodizations, each with its own internal dynamics. Some will conclude that Marx, a true historian, kept an open mind and avoided all dogmatism. Others will argue that the presence of these two, prima facie incompatible views shows a deplorable lack of intellectual discipline. Most probably, there is an element of truth in both assertions. [Pg.317]


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Class property

Intellectual property

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