Posts Tagged ‘Legal human computer interaction’

Attfield & Blandford on Discovery-Led Refinement in e-Discovery Investigations

July 15, 2010

Dr. Simon Attfield of the Middlesex University School of Engineering and Information Sciences Interaction Design Centre, and Professor Ann Blandford of University College London UCL Interaction Centre, have published Discovery-Led Refinement in e-Discovery Investigations: Sensemaking, Cognitive Ergonomics and System Design, forthcoming in Artificial Intelligence and Law. Here is the abstract:

Given the very large numbers of documents involved in e-discovery investigations, lawyers face a considerable challenge of collaborative sensemaking. We report findings from three workplace studies which looked at different aspects of how this challenge was met. From a sociotechnical perspective, the studies aimed to understand how investigators collectively and individually worked with information to support sensemaking and decision making. Here, we focus on discovery-led refinement; specifically, how engaging with the materials of the investigations led to discoveries that supported refinement of the problems and new strategies for addressing them. These refinements were essential for tractability. We begin with observations which show how new lines of enquiry were recursively embedded. We then analyse the conceptual structure of a line of enquiry and consider how reflecting this in e-discovery support systems might support scalability and group collaboration. We then focus on the individual activity of manual document review where refinement corresponded with the inductive identification of classes of irrelevant and relevant documents within a collection. Our observations point to the effects of priming on dealing with these efficiently and to issues of cognitive ergonomics at the human–computer interface. We use these observations to introduce visualisations that might enable reviewers to deal with such refinements more efficiently.

Call for Papers: ASIST 2010: Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology

May 27, 2010

A call for papers — with submission deadline of 31 May 2010 — has been issued for ASIST 2010: The Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, to be held 22-27 October 2010, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

The calls for panels, workshops and tutorials also have a submission deadline of 31 May 2010.

The call for posters, demos, and videos has a submission deadline of 16 July 2010.

Submissions are invited on topics related to any of six tracks:

For more information, please see the calls.

Call for Papers: iConference 2011

May 22, 2010

A call for papers — with submissions deadline of 30 August 2010 — has been issued for iConference 2011: The Annual Conference of Information Science Schools (iSchools), to be held 8-11 February 2011 at the Renaissance Hotel, Seattle, Washington, USA. The conference is hosted by the University of Washington Information School.

Papers are invited on the following themes in information science:

  • Social inclusion
  • Context
  • Materiality
  • Personalization
  • Memory

This conference may be of interest to legal informatics and communication scholars because a number of legal informatics and communication research topics fall within the conference themes, and because legal informatics and communications papers have been presented at previous iConferences, such as Tom Bruce’s paper on ensuring public access to digital legal information at iConference 2010.

For more information, please see the call for papers.

HT Karen Fisher.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 95 other followers

%d bloggers like this: