Posts Tagged ‘Modeling legal cases’
March 16, 2012
Dr. Adam Wyner of the University of Leeds Centre for Digital Citizenship and Dr. Rinke Hoekstra of the University of Amsterdam’s Leibniz Center for Law have published A legal case OWL ontology with an instantiation of Popov v. Hayashi, forthcoming in Artificial Intelligence and Law. Here is the abstract:
The paper provides an OWL ontology for legal cases with an instantiation of the legal case Popov v. Hayashi. The ontology makes explicit the conceptual knowledge of the legal case domain, supports reasoning about the domain, and can be used to annotate the text of cases, which in turn can be used to populate the ontology. A populated ontology is a case base which can be used for information retrieval, information extraction, and case based reasoning. The ontology contains not only elements for indexing the case (e.g. the parties, jurisdiction, and date), but as well elements used to reason to a decision such as argument schemes and the components input to the schemes. We use the Protégé ontology editor and knowledge acquisition system, current guidelines for ontology development, and tools for visual and linguistic presentation of the ontology.
Click here for the Legal Case Ontology, which is described and applied in the article.
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal ontologies, Semantic Web and law, Legal knowledge representation, Modeling legal argumentation, Modeling legal reasoning, Modeling legal arguments, Legal semantic web, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal cases, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Rinke Hoekstra, Knowledge Engineering Review, Legal Case Ontology
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June 19, 2011
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 5 September 2011 — has been issued for JURIX 2011: The 24th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems, to be held 14-16 December 2011 at the University of Vienna, in Vienna, Austria.
Papers are invited on the following topics:
- Support for lawyers, in legal reasoning, document drafting, negotiation;
- Support for the production and management of legislation, in agenda setting, policy analysis, drafting, workflow management, monitoring implementation;
- Support for the judiciary, in application of the law, analysis of evidence, management of cases;
- Support for police activities, in forensic inquiries, search and evaluation of evidence, management of investigations;
- Support for public administration, in applying regulations and managing information;
- Support for the acquisition, management or use of legal knowledge, using rules, cases, neural networks, intelligent agents or other methods;
- Systems and methods to support policies and legal issues for social networks;
- Retrieval of legal information;
- Legal education;
- Digital-rights management;
- Alternative dispute resolution, particularly on-line;
- Regulatory compliance and compliance of business processes;
- Theoretical foundations for the use of Artificial Intelligence techniques in the legal domain;
- Models of legal knowledge, including concepts (legal ontologies), rules, cases, principles, values and procedures;
- Legal inference and argumentation;
- Verification and validation of legal knowledge systems;
- Management of legal information in the semantic web;
- XML standards for legal documents, including legislative, judicial, administrative acts as well as private documents, such as contracts;
- Modelling the legal interactions of autonomous agents and digital institutions;
- Methods for managing organizational change when introducing legal knowledge systems;
- Evaluation of systems using advanced informatics techniques in legal applications;
- Interdisciplinary applications of legal informatics methods and systems.
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Professor Dr. Henry Prakken.
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Tags:Legal XML, Digital rights management, Legal ontologies, Semantic Web and law, Legal knowledge representation, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information retrieval, Regulatory compliance systems, Legal argumentation, Legal decision support systems, Artificial intelligence and law, JURIX, Legal inference, Legal evidence information systems, Legal multiagent systems, Legal agent based systems, Legal knowledge based systems, Legal metadata, Legal descriptive metadata, Legal semantic web, Legal negotiation systems, Henry Prakken, Modeling legal cases, Legal structural metadata, Modeling legal rules, Legal compliance information systems, Legal Information Management, International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems, Evaluation of legal information systems, JURIX 2011, Public administration information systems, Organizational change and legal information systems, Legal drafting systems
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
December 15, 2010
The full text of the accepted papers for the JURIX 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, to be held 15 December 2010 at the University of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, UK, have been posted by Dr. Adam Wyner of the University of Leeds Centre for Digital Citizenship:
- Steven Van Driel and Henry Prakken, Visualising the Argumentation Structure of an Expert Witness Report with Rationale (long)
- Tom Gordon, Analyzing Open Source License Compatibility Issues with Carneades (long)
- Martyn Lloyd-Kelly and Adam Wyner, Emotional Argumentation Schemes in Legal Cases (short)
- Burkhard Schafer, Say “cheese”: Natural Kinds, Deontic Logic, and European Court of Justice Decision C-210/89 (long)
- Anna Ronkainen, Mosong, a Fuzzy Logic Model of Trade Mark Similarity (long)
- Adam Wyner and Trevor Bench-Capon, Visualising Legal Case-based Reasoning Argumentation Schemes (long)
For more information, please see Dr. Wyner’s post announcing these papers, the workshop call for papers, or the JURIX 2010 Website.
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal informatics conferences, Judicial information systems, JURIX, Modeling legal cases, Modeling legislation, Modeling legal rules, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Modeling statutes, JURIX 2010, Modeling regulations, Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules
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December 3, 2010
The accepted papers for the JURIX 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, to be held 15 December 2010 at the University of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, UK, have been announced by Dr. Adam Wyner of the University of Leeds Centre for Digital Citizenship:
- Steven Van Driel and Henry Prakken, Visualising the Argumentation Structure of an Expert Witness Report with Rationale (long)
- Tom Gordon, Analyzing Open Source License Compatibility Issues with Carneades (long)
- Martyn Lloyd-Kelly and Adam Wyner, Emotional Argumentation Schemes in Legal Cases (short)
- Burkhard Schafer, Say “cheese”: Natural Kinds, Deontic Logic, and European Court of Justice Decision C-210/89 (long)
- Anna Ronkainen, Mosong, a Fuzzy Logic Model of Trade Mark Similarity (long)
- Adam Wyner and Trevor Bench-Capon, Visualising Legal Case-based Reasoning Argumentation Schemes (long)
For more information, please see Dr. Wyner’s post announcing these papers, the workshop call for papers, or the JURIX 2010 Website.
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal informatics conferences, Judicial information systems, JURIX, Modeling legal cases, Modeling legislation, Modeling legal rules, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Modeling statutes, JURIX 2010, Modeling regulations, Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules
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October 16, 2010
A call for papers — with submission deadline of 5 November 2010 — has been issued for the 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, to be held 15 December 2010 at the University of Liverpool, in Liverpool, England, UK, in conjunction with JURIX 2010: The 23rd International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems.
Here is the workshop description:
The aim of this workshop is to provide a forum in which researchers can present their research on modelling legal cases and legal rules.
Papers are solicited that model a particular legal case or a small set of legal rules. Authors are free to choose the case or set of legal rules and analyse them according to the authors’ preferred model of representation; any theoretical discussion should be grounded in or exemplified by the case or rules at hand. Papers should make clear what are the particular distinctive features of their approach and why these features are useful in modelling the chosen case or rules. The workshop is an opportunity for authors to demonstrate the benefits of their approach and for group discussions to identify useful overlapping features as well as aspects to be further explored and developed.
For more information, please see the call for papers on Dr. Adam Wyner’s blog, Language Logic Law Software.
Disclosure: I am a member of the workshop’s Programme Committee.
HT Dr. Adam Wyner.
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal informatics conferences, Judicial information systems, JURIX, Modeling legal cases, Modeling legislation, Modeling legal rules, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Modeling statutes, JURIX 2010, Modeling regulations, Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules, 2010 Workshop on Modelling Legal Cases and Legal Rules
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June 7, 2010
A call for papers — with abstract submission deadline of 29 August 2010 and extended full paper submission deadline of 12 September 2010 5 September 2010 — has been issued for JURIX 2010: The 23rd International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems, to be held 16-17 December 2010 at the University of Liverpool Department of Computer Science in Liverpool, England, UK.
The submission deadline for tutorials, workshops and demonstration proposals is 19 September 2010.
Papers and proposals are invited on the following topics:
- “systems supporting lawyers, in legal reasoning, document drafting, negotiation
- systems supporting the production and management of legislation, in agenda setting, policy analysis, drafting, workflow management, monitoring implementation
- systems supporting the judiciary, in application of the law, analysis of evidence, management of cases
- systems supporting police activities, in forensic inquiries, search and evaluation of evidence, management of investigations
- systems supporting public administration, in applying regulations and managing information
- systems for the retrieval of legal information
- systems supporting legal education
- systems for digital-rights management
- systems supporting the acquisition, management or use of legal knowledge, using rules, cases, neural networks, intelligent agents or other methods
- systems supporting alternative dispute resolution, particularly on-line
- systems and methods to support regulatory compliance and compliance of business processes
- systems and method to support policies and legal issues for social networks
- theoretical foundations for the use of Artificial Intelligence in the legal domain
- models of legal knowledge, including concepts (legal ontologies), rules, cases, principles, values and procedures
- models of legal inference and argumentation
- methods for verifying and validating legal knowledge systems
- methods and techniques for managing legal information in the semantic web
- methods for managing organizational change when introducing legal knowledge systems
- XML standards for legal documents, including legislative, judicial, administrative acts as well as private documents, such as contracts
- methods for modelling the legal interactions of autonomous agents and digital institutions”
For more information, please see the call for papers.
HT Dr. Radboud G. F. Winkels.
[NOTE: This post was last updated on 1 September 2010 to add the extended full paper submission deadline.]
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Tags:Alternative dispute resolution systems, Artificial intelligence and law, Criminal justice information systems, Digital rights management, International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems, Judicial information systems, JURIX, JURIX 2010, Legal agent based systems, Legal argument systems, Legal argumentation, Legal argumentation systems, Legal case management systems, Legal evidence information systems, Legal expert systems, Legal informatics conferences, Legal information retrieval, Legal instructional technology, Legal intelligent agents, Legal knowledge management, Legal knowledge representation, Legal multiagent systems, Legal negotiation systems, Legal ontologies, Legal semantic web, Legal social media, Legal social networks, Legal XML, Legislative information systems, Modeling legal cases, Modeling legal rules, Online dispute resolution, Online dispute resolution systems, Semantic Web and law, University of Liverpool Department of Computer Science, Web 2.0 and law
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
May 22, 2010
Dr. Tomasz Zurek of Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Institute of Computer Science, and Emil Kruk of Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Institute of Administration and Public Law, have published Legal Advisory System for the Agricultural Tax Law, in Business Information Systems Workshops: BIS 2009 International Workshops, Poznan, Poland, April 27-29, 2009, Revised Papers (2009).
The paper was originally presented at LIT 2009: The 2nd Workshop on Legal Informatics and Legal Information Technology, held 28 April 2009 in Poznan, Poland.
Here is the abstract of the paper:
The authors of this study attempted to develop an advisory tool functioning in the scope of the Agricultural Tax Act. The focus of the authors in this study was on presenting the outcome of the efforts connected with building the ontology which would allow for representing individual cases, and dealing with cases not expressly regulated by law. This study will also outline the structure and concept of the system in question.
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Tags:Emil Kruk, Legal decision support systems, Legal expert systems, Legal knowledge representation, Legal ontologies, LIT, LIT 2009, Modeling legal cases, Tax law information systems, Tomasz Zurek, Workshop on Legal Informatics and Legal Information Technology
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May 5, 2010
Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal ontologies, Semantic Web and law, Legal knowledge representation, Modeling legal argumentation, Modeling legal reasoning, Modeling legal arguments, Legal semantic web, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal cases, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Rinke Hoekstra, Knowledge Engineering Review, Protege, Protégé Ontology Editor, Legal Case Ontology
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April 27, 2010
Dr. Adam Wyner of the University of Leeds Centre for Digital Citizenship and Dr. Rinke Hoekstra of the University of Amsterdam’s Leibniz Center for Law have had the following article accepted for publication: A Legal Case OWL Ontology with an Instantiation of Popov v. Hayashi, forthcoming in Knowledge Engineering Review, in a special issue on case-based reasoning.
Click here for a preprint of the article. (Thanks to Dr. Wyner for posting this on his blog.)
Click here for the OWL ontology — called Legal Case Ontology version 9 — described in the article. (Thanks to Dr. Wyner for posting this on his blog.)
Click here for Dr. Hoekstra’s image of the ontology as applied to the Popov v. Hayashi case.
Here is the abstract of the article:
The paper provides an OWL ontology for legal cases with an instantiation of the legal case Popov v. Hayashi. The ontology makes explicit the conceptual knowledge of the legal case domain, supports reasoning about the domain, and can be used to annotate the text of cases, which in turn can be used to populate the ontology. A populated ontology is a case base which can be used for information retrieval, information extraction, and case based reasoning. The ontology contains not only elements of indexing the case (e.g. the parties, jurisdiction, and date), but as well elements used to reason to a decision such as argument schemes and the components input to the schemes. We use the Protege ontology editor and knowledge acquisition system, current guidelines for ontology development, and tools for visual and linguistic presentation of the ontology.
For full text of the article prior to publication, please contact the authors. Thanks to Dr. Wyner for the abstract and for posting the preprint.
[Post updated 29 April 2010 to link to the preprint.]
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Tags:Adam Wyner, Legal ontologies, Semantic Web and law, Legal knowledge representation, Modeling legal argumentation, Modeling legal reasoning, Modeling legal arguments, Legal semantic web, Modeling legal logic, Modeling legal cases, Modeling judicial decisions, Modeling court decisions, Rinke Hoekstra, Knowledge Engineering Review, Legal Case Ontology
Posted in Articles and papers | 1 Comment »
February 3, 2010
An overview of The ESTRELLA Project (The European project for Standardized Transparent Representations in order to Extend Legal Accessibility), a major legal informatics project based at the University of Amsterdam’s Leibniz Center for Law, and intended to create standards for European legal information systems, has been posted by Dr. Adam Wyner.
The post contains excerpts from the 2008 ESTRELLA User Report.
Dr. Wyner describes the main components of the project:
For more information, please see the entire post.
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Tags:ESTRELLA, European project for Standardized Transparent Representations in order to Extend Legal Accessibility, Inference rules for legal information, Legal argument, Legal argumentation, Legal case based reasoning, Legal Knowledge Interchange Format, Legal knowledge representation, Legal ontologies, Legal semantic web, Legal XML, Legislative XML, Leibniz Center for Law, LKIF, LKIF Core Ontology, MetaLex, Modeling legal argument, Modeling legal cases, Semantic Web and law, XML schemas for legislation
Posted in Applications, Project deliverables, Projects, Technology developments, Technology tools | Leave a Comment »