Posts Tagged ‘International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law’
April 28, 2013
Calls for papers remain open for the following workshops being held 10/14 June 2013 at ICAIL 2013: International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law in Rome, Italy:
W2 — Argumentation in AI and Law: what do we know and where should we go?
- Chair: Trevor Bench-Capon
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 29 April 2013
- Workshop Date: 10 June 2013
W3 — Legal Open Data: from Institutions to Crowd-sourcing
- Chair: Monica Palmirani
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 4 May 2013
- Workshop Date: 10 June 2013
W4 — 13th International Workshop on Computational Models of Natural Argument (CMNA XIII)
- Chairs: Floriana Grasso, Chris Reed
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: Short papers: 30 April 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W7 — Discovery of Electronically Stored Information Workshop (DESI V)
- Chairs: Jason Baron
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: Research papers: 1 May 2013; Position papers: 8 May 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W9 — Network analysis in legal sources
- Chair: Radboud Winkels
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 10 May 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
Click here for a complete list of ICAIL 2013 workshops and tutorials.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, ICAIL 2013 Workshops, ICAIL workshops, ICAIL Workshops 2013, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal informatics conferences
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
April 9, 2013
The list of accepted papers, research abstracts, and demos has been posted for ICAIL 2013: International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, to be held 10-14 June 2013 in Rome.
Here is the list:
Papers
- Trevor Bench-Capon, Henry Prakken, Zachary Wyner Ada , Katie Atkinson: Argument schemes for Reasoning with Legal Cases Using Values
- Guido Boella, Marijn Janssen, Joris Hulstijn, Llio Humphreys, Leendert van der Torre: Managing Legal Interpretation in Regulatory Compliance
- Isabella Distinto, Nicola Guarino, Claudio Masolo: A well-founded ontological framework for modeling personal income tax
- Davide Gianfelice, Leonardo Lesmo, Monica Palmirani, Daniele Perlo, Daniele P. Radicioni: Modificatory Provisions Detection: a Hybrid NLP Approach
- Laura Giordano, Alberto Martelli, Daniele Theseider Dupré: Temporal Deontic Action Logic for the Verification of Compliance to Norms in ASP
- Guido Governatori, Francesco Olivieri, Antonino Rotolo, Simone Scannapieco: Legal Contractions: A Logical Analysis
- Guido Governatori, Monica Palmirani, Tara Athan, Harold Boley, Adrian Paschke, Adam Wyner: LegalRuleML
- Matthias Grabmair, Kevin D. Ashley: Using Event Progression to Enhance Purposive Argumentation in the Value Judgment Formalism
- Marc Lauritsen: On Balance
- Antonio Mastropaolo, Francesco Pallante, Daniele P. Radicioni: Legal Documents Categorization by Compression
- Antonino Rotolo, Serena Villata, Fabien Gandon: A Deontic Logic Semantics for Licenses Composition in the Web of Data
- Zaher Salah, Frans Coenen, Davide Grossi: Extracting Debate Graphs from Parliamentary Transcripts: A Study Directed at UK House of Commons Debates
- Mihai Surdeanu, Sara Jeruss: Identifying Patent Monetization Entities
- Tran Thi Oanh, Nguyen Le Minh,Akira Shimazu: Reference Resolution in Legal Texts
- Marc van Opijnen: A Model for Automated Rating of Case Law
- Charlotte S. Vlek, Henry Prakken, Silja Renooij, Bart Verheij: Modeling Crime Scenarios in a Bayesian Network
- Tomasz Zurek, Michał Araszkiewicz: Modeling teleological interpretation
Research Abstracts
- Michał Araszkiewicz, Agata Łopatkiewicz, Adam Zienkiewicz: Factor-Based Parent Plan Support System
- Kevin D. Ashley, Vern R. Walker: Automated Monitoring of Legal-Rule Compliance Using DeepQA NLP Tools: Screening Legal Documents for Argumentation Evidence
- Michal Chalamish, Moshe Hazoom, Uri J. Schild: Semi-Automatic Creation of Wigmore Diagrams
- Jack G. Conrad, John Zeleznikow: The Significance of Evaluation in AI and Law: A Case Study Re-examining ICAIL Proceedings
- Michael Curtotti, Eric McCreath, Srinivas Sridharan: Software Tools for the Visualization of Definition Networks in Legal Contracts
- Tingting Li, Tina Balke, Marina De Vos, Julian Padget, Ken Satoh: A Model-based Approach to the Automatic Revision of Secondary Legislation
- Doris Liebwald: Vagueness in Law. A Stimulus for ‘Artificial Intelligence & Law’
- Nada Mimouni, Meritxell Fernandez-Barrera, Adeline Nazarenko, Daniele Bourcier, Sylvie Salotti: A Relational Approach for Information Retrieval on XML Legal Sources
- Katsumi Nitta, Shumpei Kubosawa, Kei Nishina, Masaki Sugimoto, Shogo Okada: A Discussion Training Support System and Its Evaluation
- Gordon J. Pace, Fernando Schapachnik: Synthesising Implicit Contracts
- Anna Ronkainen: Intelligent Trademark Analysis: Experiments in Large-Scale Evaluation of Real-World Legal AI
- Antonino Rotolo, Regis Riveret, Didac Busquets, Giuseppe Contissa, Giovanni Sartor: Vicarious Reinforcement and Ex Ante Law Enforcement: A Study in Norm-Governed Learning Agents
- Ted Sichelman: The Mathematical Structure of Legal Rights
- Radboud Winkels, Jochem Douw, Sara Veldhoen: Experiments in Automated Support for Argument Reconstruction
Demo Abstracts
Guido Boella, Luigi Di Caro, Daniele Rispoli, Livio Robaldo: A System for Classifying Multi-label Text into EuroVoc
Thomas Gordon: Introducing the Carneades Web Application
Guido Governatori, Sidney Shek: Business Process Compliance Checker
Luc Ferrand, Isabelle Pesquié-Geday: Hammurabi, the legal expert assistant platform for the French Judge: How to deliver up to date knowledge of national and European laws and regulations in front of rapid expansion of legal information and decisions, with an automated software assistant
Jop Hofste, Hans Henseler, Maurice van Keulen: Computer assisted extraction, merging and correlation of identities
Adam Zachary Wyner, Maya Wardeh, Katie Atkinson, Trevor Bench-Capon: Argumentation Based Tools for Policy-Making
In addition, registration for ICAIL 2013 is now open.
HT Anne Gardner and @francesconi_e
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal agent based systems, Legal compliance information systems, Legal compliance systems, Legal expert systems, Legal multiagent systems, LegalRuleML
Posted in Abstracts, Articles and papers, Conference papers, Demonstrations | Leave a Comment »
April 1, 2013
Calls for papers have been posted for most of the workshops being held at ICAIL 2013: International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law.
The workshops will be held on 10/14 June 2013 in Rome, Italy.
Here are submission deadlines and links to workshop calls and Websites:
W1 — Coherence 2013 – Artificial Intelligence, Coherence and Legal Reasoning
- Chair: Michal Araszkiewicz
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 20 April 2013
- Workshop Date: 10 June 2013
W2 — Argumentation in AI and Law: what do we know and where should we go?
- Chair: Trevor Bench-Capon
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 29 April 2013
- Workshop Date: 10 June 2013
W3 — Legal Open Data: from Institutions to Crowd-sourcing
- Chair: Monica Palmirani
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: TBA
- Workshop Date: 10 June 2013
W4 — 13th International Workshop on Computational Models of Natural Argument (CMNA XIII)
- Chairs: Floriana Grasso, Chris Reed
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: Long papers: 15 April 2013; Short papers: 30 April 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W5 — SmartData: the New Face of AI, and the Law
- Chairs: Ann Cavoukian, Stefano Nolfi
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: N/A.
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W6 — Workshop on Formal Argument and Evidential Inference
- Chairs: Giovanni Sartor, Scott Brewer, Gustavo Ribeiro
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: Passed
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W7 — Discovery of Electronically Stored Information Workshop (DESI V)
- Chairs: Jason Baron
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: Research papers: 1 May 2013; Position papers: 8 May 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W8 — Cross-border e-justice and e-Codex
- Chair: Marco Fabri
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: N/A.
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
W9 — Network analysis in legal sources
- Chair: Radboud Winkels
- Call-for-Papers Submission Deadline: 1 May 2013
- Workshop Date: 14 June 2013
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, ICAIL 2013 Workshops, ICAIL workshops, ICAIL Workshops 2013, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal informatics conferences
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
March 24, 2013
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 1 May 2013 — has been posted for the workshop, Network Analysis and Law, to be held 14 June 2013 in Rome at ICAIL 2013: International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law.
Here is an excerpt from the call:
This workshop aims to bring together researchers from computational social science, computational legal theory, network science and related disciplines in order to discuss the use and usefulness of network analysis in the legal domain. We are thinking of both *social* networks (of e.g. legal scholars or criminals) and the network of *sources of law* (sources referring to other sources form a network). Topics include the (re)construction, analysis and visualisation of these networks and their interactions.
We invite papers on and demonstrations of original work on these and other aspects of network analysis in the legal field. Submissions will be subject to a light review process on appropriateness for this call, originality of the research described and technical quality. [...]
For more details, please see the complete call.
HT @Radboud
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Citation networks and legal information systems, ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal citation networks, Legal informatics conferences, Legal social network analysis, Legal social networks, Legal text processing, Modeling legal citation networks, Modeling statutory citation networks, Network analysis and law, Network Analysis and Law Workshop, Network Analysis and Law Workshop 2013, Network analysis and legal communication studies, Network analysis and legal informatics, Social network analysis and legal information, Social network analysis and legal information systems, Social networks and law, Social networks and legal information systems
Posted in Business developments, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
October 3, 2012
Professor Dr. Trevor Bench-Capon the University of Liverpool Department of Computer Science, and colleagues, have published A history of AI and Law in 50 papers: 25 years of the international conference on AI and Law, forthcoming in Artificial Intelligence and Law.
Here is the abstract:
We provide a retrospective of 25 years of the International Conference on AI and Law, which was first held in 1987. Fifty papers have been selected from the thirteen conferences and each of them is described in a short subsection individually written by one of the 24 authors. These subsections attempt to place the paper discussed in the context of the development of AI and Law, while often offering some personal reactions and reflections. As a whole, the subsections build into a history of the last quarter century of the field, and provide some insights into where it has come from, where it is now, and where it might go.
Three of Adam Wyner‘s contributions to this issue are linked from the post: Wyner on Logic Programming, Case Law Knowledge Bases, and Legal Case-Based Reasoning and Information Retrieval.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Adam Wyner, Artificial intelligence and law, Enrico Francesconi, ICAIL, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Jack G. Conrad, Kevin Ashley, L Thorne McCarty, Legal case based reasoning, Legal decision support systems, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conference, Legal informatics scholarship, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal logic programming, Logic programming and law, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal reasoning, Trevor Bench-Capon
Posted in Articles and papers, Conference papers | Leave a Comment »
September 23, 2012
A call for papers — with paper submission deadline of 18 January 2013 — has been issued for ICAIL 2013: 14th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, to be held 10-14 June 2013 in Rome, Italy.
The Twitter account for the conference is @ICAIL2013 . The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #ICAIL2013. The conference organizers invite those interested to follow the Twitter account and hashtag and to comment and contribute with the latest news.
The conference features two tracks: one for “regular papers” and one for “innovative applications papers.”
Here is the complete list of deadlines:
- Mentoring program request deadline: November 9, 2012
- Mentoring program paper deadline: November 16, 2012
- Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals: December 7, 2012
- Submission of abstracts (optional): January 11, 2013
- Submission of papers deadline: January 18, 2013
- Notification of acceptance: March 20, 2013
- Final revised and formatted papers due: April 19, 2013
- Conference: June 10 – June 14, 2013
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
- Automatic legal text classification and summarization
- Automated information extraction from legal databases and texts
- Machine learning and data mining applied to legal databases
- Conceptual or model-based legal information retrieval
- E-discovery and e-disclosure
- E-government and e-justice
- Computational models of evidential reasoning
- Modeling norms for multi-agent systems
- Modeling negotiation and contract formation
- Computational models of case-based legal reasoning
- Online dispute resolution
- Intelligent legal tutoring systems
- Intelligent support systems for the legal domain
- Interdisciplinary applications of legal informatics methods and systems
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Anne Gardner
[NOTE: Updated 23 November 2012 to add the Twitter account and hashtag. HT Enrico Francesconi]
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Automatic classification of legal texts, Automatic legal information extraction, Automatic summarization of legal text, Bart Verheij, Conceptual information retrieval and law, Conceptual legal information retrieval, Contract information systems, Court information systems, ediscovery, egovernment, eJustice, Electronic discovery, Electronic evidence information systems, Electronic government, Enrico Francesconi, Evidentiary information systems, ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, Interdisciplinary legal informatics methodologies, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, ITTIG-CNR, Judicial information systems, Legal agent based systems, Legal case based reasoning, Legal common sense knowledge, Legal communication, Legal data mining, Legal decision support systems, Legal educational technology, Legal evidence information systems, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal informatics methodologies, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal instructional technology, Legal knowledge representation, Legal machine learning, Legal multiagent systems, Legal negotiation, Legal norms in multiagent systems, Legal ontologies, Legal text mining, Legal text processing, Legal tutoring systems, Machine learning and law, Machine learning and legal texts, Model based legal information retrieval, Model-based information retrieval and law, Modeling contract formation, Modeling contracts, Modeling evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal argumentation, Modeling legal case based reasoning, Modeling legal communication, Modeling legal contracts, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal negotiation, Modeling legal norms, Modeling legal reasoning, Modeling legal rules, Online dispute resolution, Representing legal common sense knowledge
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
July 12, 2012
Tags:Adam Wyner, Artificial intelligence and law, ICAIL, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal case based reasoning, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal logic programming, Logic programming and law, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal reasoning
Posted in Articles and papers | Leave a Comment »
May 12, 2012
[NOTE: Workshops and tutorials have been announced for ICAIL 2013. For workshops, submission deadline vary; please see the description of each workshop.]
[NOTE: The ICAIL 2013 call for papers is now available at http://icail2013.ittig.cnr.it/index.php/call . HT Anne Gardner]
ICAIL 2013: The International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, will be held 10-14 June 2013 in Rome, Italy, according to an email message sent on 11 May 2013 by the Executive Committee of the International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law (IAAIL) to the IAAIL listserv.
The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #icail2013 and the Twitter account for the conference is @ICAIL2013
The call for papers submission deadline has not yet been announced.
According to the message, the conference will be hosted by the Institute of Legal Information Theory and Techniques of the National Research Council of Italy (ITTIG-CNR), and the conference officers will include:
HT Dr. Anne Gardner.
[NOTE: Updated on 21 September 2012 to link to the call for papers.]
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Anne Gardner, Artificial intelligence and law, Bart Verheij, Enrico Fr, ICAIL, ICAIL 2013, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, ITTIG-CNR
Posted in Conference Announcements | 3 Comments »
January 29, 2012
A call for proposals — with submission deadline of 17 February 2012 — has been issued for a special 25th anniversary issue of the journal Artificial Intelligence and Law.
Here is an excerpt from the instructions:
Our idea is that a large number of contributors should each write a short piece about some particular paper that appeared in ICAIL [the International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law]. The paper should be one that has contributed to the contributor’s understanding of some aspect of AI and Law, and which still has some message for today.
Contributions should be at most two pages and should cover:
- The research context of the paper: the state of the art at the time;
- The contribution of the paper (e.g. the technique, method, or question it introduced; its main theoretical or empirical results; or other contribution);
- How this contribution influenced the author personally;
- How this contribution has been developed in AI and Law;
- Why the paper is important today (e.g. lines of research that remain open, or questions that need no longer be asked).
Proposals should include a list of “three papers that you would be interested in writing about.”
The call includes a list of the most frequently cited papers from the conference. “(A complete table of contents for all ICAILs is at http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/conf/icail/index.html.)”
For more information, please see the call.
HT Anne Gardner.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, ICAIL, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal informatics, Trevor Bench-Capon
Posted in Calls for papers, Calls for proposals | Leave a Comment »
June 9, 2011
Legal Information Institute Director Tom Bruce‘s and my new research abstract, entitled Adapting Specialized Legal Metadata to the Digital Environment: The Code of Federal Regulations Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules (click here for slides) was presented on June 8 at ICAIL 2011, the 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
Here is the abstract:
In the domain of print-based U.S. legal information, specialized tools that create connections between different categories of metadata increase legal research efficiency. Such tools, redesigned for the electronic sphere, could enhance digital legal information systems. This research abstract illustrates this kind of redesign, through a case study of one such tool — the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations — which connects regulations to the statutes that authorize them.
Like this:
Like Loading...
Tags:Adapting Specialized Legal Metadata to the Digital Environment: The Code of Federal Regulations Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules, Code of Federal Regulations, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal metadata, Open government data, Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules, Ponts, PTOA, Reuse of public sector information, Robert Richards, Tom Bruce
Posted in Articles and papers | Leave a Comment »