14079

Application Tendon Trajectory Guide
Matter Number PER-33 Reference Case 1 PER-33
Created 1/6/24, 9:58 PM Modified 1/6/24, 9:58 PM
Application Number
Paragraph Number

96

Content

“Reference feature” refers to a feature configured for use as a point, plane, axis, or line of reference (aka a reference). A reference or reference feature can be used to position, measure, orient, fixation, couple, engage, and/or align one object or structure with another object or structure. In certain embodiments, a reference or reference feature can serve as a baseline, a ground truth, a waypoint, a control point, a landmark, and/or the like. A reference feature can facilitate moving from one coordinate system or frame of reference in a virtual environment to a position, location, frame of reference, environment, or orientation on, or in, an actual object, structure, device, apparatus, anatomical structure, or the like. Advantageously, a reference feature can coordinate objects, models, or structures in a digital or virtual model or representation with corresponding objects or structures (e.g., anatomical structures) of actual physical objects or structures. Said another way, a reference feature can serve to map from a virtual or modeled object to an actual or physical object. As used herein, "feature" refers to a distinctive attribute or aspect of something. (Search "feature" on google.com. Oxford Languages, 2021. Web. 20 Apr. 2021.) A feature may include one or more apparatuses, structures, objects, systems, sub-systems, devices, or the like. A feature may include a modifier that identifies a particular function or operation and/or a particular structure relating to the feature. Examples of such modifiers applied to a feature, include, but are not limited to, "attachment feature," "alignment feature," "securing feature," "placement feature," "protruding feature," "engagement feature," "disengagement feature," “resection feature”, “guide feature”, "alignment feature," and the like.

Notes

Added by DJM Jan 2024