Posts Tagged ‘econtracting systems’
April 6, 2011
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 20 April 2011 — has been issued for Computational Law Workshop: A Bridge Towards the Business Rules, to be held 6 June 2011, at The University of Pittsburgh, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. The workshop is being held in conjunction with ICAIL 2011: The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law.
Papers for the workshop are invited on the following topics:
- Contract and Regulations as a basis for coordination of cross-organisational interactions
- System theoretic point of view Formalisms for expressing contracts and Regulations
- Contract description languages for Contract negotiation and validation
- Standards for capturing rules in contracts and regulations (e.g. RIF, Legal RuleML, LKIF, SBVR, etc):
- Run-time contract monitoring and enforcement Standardisation
- Systems Contract management requirements for specific contracts,
- Standards/initiatives (e.g. Web Services, BPEL4WS, WS-CDL, tc)
- Links between contracts, regulations, business processes and business services
- Practical experience with contract and regulations management systems Role
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Professor Dr. Monica Palmirani.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Computational Law 2011, Computational Law A Bridge Towards the Business Rules, Computational Law Workshop 2011, Computational Law Workshop A Bridge Towards the Business Rules, Contract management systems, econtracting systems, econtracts, Electronic contract systems, Electronic contracting systems, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal informatics conferences, Modeling contracts, Modeling legal rules, Modeling regulations, Monica Palmirani, Regulations management systems, Regulatory compliance systems
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 1 Comment »
February 26, 2011
Calls for papers, with diverse submission deadlines, have been issued for the workshops at ICAIL 2011: The International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law; the workshops are scheduled to be held 6 and 10 June 2011, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
DESI IV: Workshop on Setting Standards for Searching Electronically Stored Information in Discovery Proceedings, 6 June 2011. Deadlines:
- 1 April 2011: Research papers;
- 22 April 2011: Position papers.
Workshop on Agent Model-Based Reasoning in Law, 6 June 2011. Deadline:
Computational Law: A Bridge Towards the Business Rules, 6 June 2011. Deadline:
AI & Evidential Inference, 10 June 2011. Deadline:
AHLTL 2011: Applying Human Language Technology to the Law, 10 June 2011. Deadline:
Coherence 2011: Artificial Intelligence, Coherence, and Judicial Reasoning, 10 June 2011. Deadlines:
- 15 April 2011: Abstracts;
- 3 June 2011: Full papers.
HT JURIX.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Legal XML, Legal ontologies, Legal knowledge representation, ICAIL, Legal informatics conferences, Legal argument, ediscovery, Legal information retrieval, Electronic contracts, Legal argumentation, Legal rhetoric, Natural language processing and law, Legal text mining, Electronic discovery, Legal inference, Legal evidence information systems, Legal natural language processing, Semantic annotation of legal documents, Legal multiagent systems, Legal agent based systems, ecommerce, Cross-language legal information systems, Electronic commerce systems, Legal narrative, Automatic classification of legal documents, Legal communication systems, Legal case based reasoning, Psychology and law, Legal translation, Modeling legal reasoning, Semantic processing of legal texts, Semantic annotation of legal texts, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Cognitive psychology and law, Legal information extraction, Legal thesauri, Legal dialogue protocols, econtracting, Modeling business rules, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Information extraction, Modeling regulations, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, econtracting systems, Inference in legal evidence information systems, Legal translation system, Multilingual legal information systems, Controlled language systems for law, Legal controlled language systems, Name matching and legal information, Alias detection and legal information, Authority control and law, Name authority control and law, Legal dialogue systems, Legal discussion systems, ICAIL ICAIL 2011, ICAIL workshops, Modeling legal agent interactions, Legal evidentiary argumentation, Evidential inference, Statistical methods in legal reasoning, Statistical methods in legal evidentiary reasoning, Cognitive science and law, Modeling judicial reasoning, Coherence in legal reasoning, Coherence in judicial reasoning, Argumentation scheme in judicial reasoning, Legal conceptual schemes, Values in legal reasoning, Values in judicial reasoning, Values in legal argumentation, Values in judicial argumentation, Values in legal evidentiary reasoning
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
February 19, 2011
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 16 May 2011 — has been issued for AICOL 2011: The Third Workshop on AI Approaches to the Complexity of Law, to be held 16 August 2011 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The workshop is to be held in conjunction with IVR 2011: XXV. World Congress of Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy.
Papers for AICOL 2011 are invited on the following topics:
- Law and Science
- Law and Cognitive Science
- Law and Complexity Theory
- Complex Systems
- Legal Theory
- Legal Culture
- Computer Ethics
- Artificial Societies
- Argumentative Frameworks
- Legal Ontologies
- Legal Concepts
- Legal Thesauri
- Taxonomies
- Natural Language Processing (NLP)
- Legal Knowledge Acquisition
- Legal Knowledge Representation
- Knowledge Management
- Cognitive schemas
- Law and Robotics
- Law and Mathematics
- Legal Graphic Representation
- Game Theory
- Formalization of Legal Systems and Norms
- Rules and Standards
- Agreement technologies
- Electronic Institutions
- Legal Information Retrieval
- Online Dispute Resolution
- Trends in e-Discovery, e-Courts, e-Administration
- Users’ studies
HT Professor Dr. Monica Palmirani.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:AICOL, Argumentation frameworks and law, Artificial intelligence and law, Court information systems, Court technology, ecommerce, ecommerce systems, econtracting systems, ecourts, ediscovery, Electronic commerce systems, Electronic contract information systems, Electronic contracting systems, Electronic discovery, Judicial information systems, Law as a complex adaptive system, Law as a complex system, Legal argument, Legal argumentation, Legal evidence information systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal natural language processing, Legal online dispute resolution, Legal ontologies, Legal philosophy, Legal taxonomies, Legal theory, Modeling of legal norms, Modeling of legal rules, Natural language processing and law, Online dispute resolution, Robotics and law, Robots and law, Visualization of legal information, Workshop on AI Approaches to the Complexity of Law
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 1 Comment »
January 8, 2011
[NOTE: The call for papers submission deadline has been extended to 17 January 2011, according to @JackGConrad.]
A call for papers has been issued for ICAIL 2011: The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, to be held 6-10 June 2011 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
The conference is organized by IAAIL: The International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law.
A mentoring program is being offered for authors wishing to submit papers to the conference.
Here are the submission deadlines:
- “Mentoring program request deadline: November 8, 2010
- Mentoring program paper deadline: November 15, 2010
- Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals: December 6, 2010
- Submission of abstracts (optional): January 3, 2011″
- Submission of papers extended deadline: January 17, 2011
Papers are invited on the following topics:
- “Formal and computational models of legal reasoning
- Knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining
- Computational models of argumentation and decision making
- Legal knowledge representation including legal ontologies and common sense knowledge
- Computational models of evidential reasoning
- Modeling norms for multi-agent systems
- Modeling negotiation and contract formation
- Computational models of case-based legal reasoning
- Conceptual or model-based legal information retrieval
- Automated information extraction from legal databases and texts
- Intelligent legal tutoring systems
- Intelligent support systems for the legal domain
- E-discovery and e-disclosure
- Automatic legal text classification and summarization
- Machine learning and data mining applied to legal databases”
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Jack G. Conrad.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Automatic legal information extraction, Automatic summarization of legal documents, Concept based legal information retrieval, econtracting, econtracting systems, ediscovery, Electronic contracting, Electronic contracting systems, Electronic discovery, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Jack G. Conrad, Legal agent based systems, Legal case based reasoning, Legal data mining, Legal decision support systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge acquisition, Legal knowledge representation, Legal machine learning, Legal multiagent systems, Legal natural language processing, Legal negotiation systems, Legal ontologies, Legal reasoning, Legal text mining, Legal text processing, Legal tutoring systems, Machine learning in legal documents, Model based legal information retrieval, Modeling legal case based reasoning, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal reasoning, Natural language processing and law, Summarization of legal information
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 1 Comment »
December 5, 2010
[NOTE: 6 December 2010 is the deadline for submitting workshop and tutorial proposals.]
A call for papers has been issued for ICAIL 2011: The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, to be held 6-10 June 2011 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
The conference is organized by IAAIL: The International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law.
A mentoring program is being offered for authors wishing to submit papers to the conference.
Here are the remaining submission deadlines:
- “Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals: December 6, 2010
- Submission of abstracts (optional): January 3, 2011
- Submission of papers deadline: January 10, 2011″
Papers are invited on the following topics:
- “Formal and computational models of legal reasoning
- Knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining
- Computational models of argumentation and decision making
- Legal knowledge representation including legal ontologies and common sense knowledge
- Computational models of evidential reasoning
- Modeling norms for multi-agent systems
- Modeling negotiation and contract formation
- Computational models of case-based legal reasoning
- Conceptual or model-based legal information retrieval
- Automated information extraction from legal databases and texts
- Intelligent legal tutoring systems
- Intelligent support systems for the legal domain
- E-discovery and e-disclosure
- Automatic legal text classification and summarization
- Machine learning and data mining applied to legal databases”
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Jack G. Conrad.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Automatic legal information extraction, Automatic summarization of legal documents, Concept based legal information retrieval, econtracting, econtracting systems, ediscovery, Electronic contracting, Electronic contracting systems, Electronic discovery, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Jack G. Conrad, Legal agent based systems, Legal case based reasoning, Legal data mining, Legal decision support systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge acquisition, Legal knowledge representation, Legal machine learning, Legal multiagent systems, Legal natural language processing, Legal negotiation systems, Legal ontologies, Legal reasoning, Legal text mining, Legal text processing, Legal tutoring systems, Machine learning in legal documents, Model based legal information retrieval, Modeling legal case based reasoning, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal reasoning, Natural language processing and law, Summarization of legal information
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
August 27, 2010
A call for papers has been issued for ICAIL 2011: The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, to be held 6-10 June 2011 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
The conference is organized by IAAIL: The International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law.
A mentoring program is being offered for authors wishing to submit papers to the conference.
Here are the submission deadlines:
- “Mentoring program request deadline: November 8, 2010
- Mentoring program paper deadline: November 15, 2010
- Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals: December 6, 2010
- Submission of abstracts (optional): January 3, 2011
- Submission of papers deadline: January 10, 2011″
Papers are invited on the following topics:
- “Formal and computational models of legal reasoning
- Knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining
- Computational models of argumentation and decision making
- Legal knowledge representation including legal ontologies and common sense knowledge
- Computational models of evidential reasoning
- Modeling norms for multi-agent systems
- Modeling negotiation and contract formation
- Computational models of case-based legal reasoning
- Conceptual or model-based legal information retrieval
- Automated information extraction from legal databases and texts
- Intelligent legal tutoring systems
- Intelligent support systems for the legal domain
- E-discovery and e-disclosure
- Automatic legal text classification and summarization
- Machine learning and data mining applied to legal databases”
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Jack G. Conrad.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Automatic legal information extraction, Automatic summarization of legal documents, Concept based legal information retrieval, econtracting, econtracting systems, ediscovery, Electronic contracting, Electronic contracting systems, Electronic discovery, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Jack G. Conrad, Legal agent based systems, Legal case based reasoning, Legal data mining, Legal decision support systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge acquisition, Legal knowledge representation, Legal machine learning, Legal multiagent systems, Legal natural language processing, Legal negotiation systems, Legal ontologies, Legal reasoning, Legal text mining, Legal text processing, Legal tutoring systems, Machine learning in legal documents, Model based legal information retrieval, Modeling legal case based reasoning, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal reasoning, Natural language processing and law, Summarization of legal information
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »