Posts Tagged ‘Legal multilingual information retrieval’
October 10, 2012
Click here for archived Twitter tweets, in .csv format, from LVI 2012: Law via the Internet Conference, held 7-9 October 2012 at the Legal Information Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Click here for the conference Website.
The Twitter hashtag for the conference is #lvi2012, and the Twitter account for the conference is @LVI2012.
Click here for the conference program and abstracts of presentations.
Some conference sessions will be livestreamed here.
For blog posts and other resources related to the conference, please see the comments to this post.
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Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, Legislative information systems, LVI, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Conference reports, Conference resources, Others' scholarly or sophisticated blogposts, Tweet archives | 28 Comments »
October 6, 2012
Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, Legislative information systems, LVI, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Abstracts, Applications, Conference Announcements, Presentations, Technology developments, Technology tools | Leave a Comment »
July 16, 2012
Philip Chung of the University of New South Wales Faculty of Law, Professor Andrew Mowbray of University of Technology Sydney Faculty of Law, and Professor Dr. Graham Greenleaf of the University of New South Wales Faculty of Law, have published Searching Legal Information in Multiple Asian Languages, forthcoming in Legal Information Management.
Here is the abstract:
In this article the Co-Directors of the Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII) explain the need for an open source search engine which can search simultaneously over legal materials in European languages and also in Asian languages, particularly those that require a ‘double byte’ representation, and the difficulties this task presents. A solution is proposed, the ‘u16a’ modifications to AustLII’s open source search engine (Sino) which is used by many legal information institutes. Two implementations of the Sino u16A approach, on the Hong Kong Legal Information Institute (HKLII), for English and Chinese, and on the Asian Legal Information Institute (AsianLII), for multiple Asian languages, are described. The implementations have been successful, though many challenges (discussed briefly) remain before this approach will provide a full multi-lingual search facility.
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Tags:Andrew Mowbray, Asian Legal Information Institute, AsianLII, AustLII, Australasian Legal Information Institute, Cross-language legal information systems, Graham Greenleaf, HKLII, Hong Kong Legal Information Institute, Legal cross-language information retrieval, Legal Information Management, Legal information retrieval, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Multilingual legal information retrieval, Open source search engines for legal information, Open source search engines for legal information retrieval, Open source search engines for legal information systems, Philip Chung, Sino, u16a
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
June 2, 2012
Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, Legislative information systems, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Conference papers | Leave a Comment »
March 9, 2012
A call for papers and presentations — with extended submission deadline of 2 April 2012 — has been issued for LVI 2012: The Law via the Internet Conference — the international conference of the legal information institutes and the free-access-to-law community — to be held October 7-9, 2012 at Cornell Law School in Ithaca, New York.
Papers and presentations are invited respecting the following tracks:
- Track 1: The Promise and Reality of e-Participation
- Track 2: The Business of (Open) Legal Publishing
- Track 3: Free Law and Government Policy
- Track 4: Application Development for Open Access and Engagement
- Track 5: Data Organization and Legal Informatics
For more information, please see the complete call.
HT @LIICornell.
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Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Calls for papers, Calls for proposals, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
March 4, 2012
A call for papers and presentations — with submission deadline of 15 March 2012 — has been issued for LVI 2012: The Law via the Internet Conference — the international conference of the legal information institutes and the free-access-to-law community — to be held October 7-9, 2012 at Cornell Law School in Ithaca, New York.
Papers and presentations are invited respecting the following tracks:
- Track 1: The Promise and Reality of e-Participation
- Track 2: The Business of (Open) Legal Publishing
- Track 3: Free Law and Government Policy
- Track 4: Application Development for Open Access and Engagement
- Track 5: Data Organization and Legal Informatics
For more information, please see the complete call.
HT @LIICornell.
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Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Calls for papers, Calls for proposals, Conference Announcements | 1 Comment »
February 10, 2012
A call for papers and presentations — with submission deadline of 15 March 2012 — has been issued for LVI 2012: The Law via the Internet Conference — the international conference of the legal information institutes and the free-access-to-law community — to be held October 7-9, 2012 at Cornell Law School in Ithaca, New York.
Papers and presentations are invited respecting the following tracks:
- Track 1: The Promise and Reality of e-Participation
- Track 2: The Business of (Open) Legal Publishing
- Track 3: Free Law and Government Policy
- Track 4: Application Development for Open Access and Engagement
- Track 5: Data Organization and Legal Informatics
For more information, please see the complete call.
HT @LIICornell.
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Tags:Citizens' participation in egovernment, Citizens' participation in lawmaking, Cross-language legal information retrieval, Cross-language legal information systems, Cross-language legal knowledge representation, Crowdsourcing and legal information systems, Digital legal publishing, egovernment, Electronic legal publishing, eparticipation, Free access to law, Interoperability of legal information, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2012, Legal informatics, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal metadata, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal ontologies, Legal publishing, Legal scholarly communication, LVI 2012, Multilingual legal knowledge representation, Open access law journals, Public access to legal information, Semantic annotation of legal texts
Posted in Calls for papers, Calls for proposals, Conference Announcements | Leave a 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.
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Tags:Alias detection and legal information, Argumentation scheme in judicial reasoning, Authority control and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Cognitive psychology and law, Cognitive science and law, Coherence in judicial reasoning, Coherence in legal reasoning, Controlled language systems for law, Cross-language legal information systems, ecommerce, econtracting, econtracting systems, ediscovery, Electronic commerce systems, Electronic contracts, Electronic discovery, Evidential inference, ICAIL, ICAIL 2011, ICAIL ICAIL 2011, ICAIL workshops, Inference in legal evidence information systems, Information extraction, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal agent based systems, Legal argument, Legal argumentation, Legal case based reasoning, Legal communication systems, Legal conceptual schemes, Legal controlled language systems, Legal dialogue protocols, Legal dialogue systems, Legal discussion systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal evidentiary argumentation, Legal evidentiary reasoning, Legal inference, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal multiagent systems, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal narrative, Legal natural language processing, Legal ontologies, Legal rhetoric, Legal text mining, Legal thesauri, Legal translation, Legal translation system, Legal XML, Modeling business rules, Modeling judicial reasoning, Modeling legal agent interactions, Modeling legal evidentiary reasoning, Modeling legal reasoning, Modeling regulations, Multilingual legal information systems, Name authority control and law, Name matching and legal information, Natural language processing and law, Psychology and law, Semantic annotation of legal documents, Semantic annotation of legal texts, Semantic processing of legal texts, Statistical methods in legal evidentiary reasoning, Statistical methods in legal reasoning, Values in judicial argumentation, Values in judicial reasoning, Values in legal argumentation, Values in legal evidentiary reasoning, Values in legal reasoning
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
February 11, 2011
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 31 March 2011 — has been issued for AHLTL 2011: Applying Human Language Technology to the Law, a workshop to be held 10 June 2011, at ICAIL 2011: The Thirteenth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
[If the call for papers or the workshop Website is down, click here for the cached version.]
Papers are invited on the following topics:
The workshop will focus on extraction of information from legal text, representations of legal language (ontologies and semantic translations), and dialogic aspects. While information extraction and retrieval are crucial areas, the workshop emphasises syntactic, semantic, and dialogic aspects of legal information processing.
Building legal resources: terminologies, ontologies, corpora.
Ontologies of legal texts, including subareas such as ontology acquisition, ontology customisation, ontology merging, ontology extension, ontology evolution, lexical information, etc.
Information retrieval and extraction from legal texts.
Semantic annotation of legal texts.
Multilingual aspects of legal text semantic processing.
Legal thesauri mapping.
Automatic Classification of legal documents.
Automated parsing and translation of natural language arguments into a logical formalism.
Linguistically-oriented XML mark up of legal arguments.
Computational theories of argumentation that are suitable to natural language.
Controlled language systems for law.
Name matching and alias detection.
Dialogue protocols and systems for legal discussion.
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Dr. Adam Wyner.
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Alias detection and legal information, Authority control and law, Automatic classification of legal documents, Controlled language systems for law, Cross-language legal information systems, ICAIL ICAIL 2011, Information extraction, International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Legal argument, Legal argumentation, Legal communication systems, Legal controlled language systems, Legal dialogue protocols, Legal dialogue systems, Legal discussion systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information extraction, Legal information retrieval, Legal knowledge representation, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal natural language processing, Legal ontologies, Legal text mining, Legal thesauri, Legal translation, Legal translation system, Legal XML, Multilingual legal information systems, Name authority control and law, Name matching and legal information, Natural language processing and law, Semantic annotation of legal documents, Semantic annotation of legal texts, Semantic processing of legal texts
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
October 7, 2010
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 15 February 2011 — has been issued for LVI 2011: Law via the Internet Conference, to be held 8-10 June 2011, at the University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, China.
The conference will be hosted by the Hong Kong Legal Information Institute (HKLII).
LVI is the conference of the Free Access to Law Movement and the legal information institutes.
For LVI 2011, papers are invited on the following topics:
- Challenges and barriers in free access to law in Asia and elsewhere
- Multi-lingual legal databases and searching
- Legal issues in the provision of free legal information
- Governance and funding models for sustainability of free legal databases
- Making historical legal materials accessible online
- Social networking technologies and their implications for free access to law?
- Keeping track of legislative evolution online
- Quality control and timeliness of online legal services
- Standards for legal information on the web?
- Free access to law as community services
- International law on the web: Treaties, International Courts etc
- Finding law across the web – indexing and searching
- Litigation support on the web
- Innovative uses of online legal data
- Court registries and electronic filing / transactions
- Interactive and ‘intelligent’ legal services on the web
- Teaching law using internet resources
- Automation of large-scale legal data on the web
- Legal publishing via the web
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Steven C. Perkins.
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Tags:Artificial intelligence and law, Automatic indexing of legal information, Court decisions, Court information systems, Digital legal casebooks, Digital legal publishing, Digitizing, Digitizing legal information, Electronic filing systems, Free access to law, Interactive legal information systems, International law information systems, Judicial decisions, Judicial information systems, Law practice technology, Law via the Internet, Law via the Internet 2011, Legal casebooks, Legal cross-language information retrieval, Legal educational technology, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information behavior, Legal information retrieval, Legal information standards, Legal instructional technology, Legal metadata, Legal metadata standards, Legal multilingual information retrieval, Legal open educational resources, Legal social media, Legal social networks, Legal text processing, Legal Web 2.0, Legislative information systems, Litigation support information systems, LVI, LVI 2011, Open educational resources, Public access to legal information, Public international law information systems, Web 2.0 and law
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