default search action
13. ICAIL 2011: Pittsburgh, PA, USA
- Kevin D. Ashley, Tom M. van Engers:
The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, Proceedings of the Conference, June 6-10, 2011, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. ACM 2011, ISBN 978-1-4503-0755-0 - Adam Z. Wyner, Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon, Katie Atkinson:
Towards formalising argumentation about legal cases. 1-10 - Floris Bex, Bart Verheij:
Legal shifts in the process of proof. 11-20 - Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon, Henry Prakken, Wietske Visser:
Argument schemes for two-phase democratic deliberation. 21-30 - Guido Governatori:
On the relationship between Carneades and Defeasible Logic. 31-40 - John F. Horty:
Reasons and precedent. 41-50 - Thomas F. Gordon:
Analyzing open source license compatibility issues with Carneades. 51-55 - Nancy L. Green:
Causal argumentation schemes to support sense-making in clinical genetics and law. 56-60 - Michal Chalamish, Dov M. Gabbay, Uri J. Schild:
Intelligent evaluation of evidence using Wigmore diagrams. 61-65 - Susan W. van den Braak, Anne Sonnenschein, Sunil Choenni, Paul R. Smit:
A method for explaining and predicting trends: an application to the Dutch justice system. 66-70 - Régis Riveret, Antonino Rotolo, Giuseppe Contissa, Giovanni Sartor, Wamberto Weber Vasconcelos:
Temporal accommodation of legal argumentation. 71-80 - Katie Atkinson, Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon, Dan Cartwright, Adam Z. Wyner:
Semantic models for policy deliberation. 81-90 - Jenny Eriksson Lundström, Giacomo Aceto, Andreas Hamfelt:
Towards a dynamic metalogic implementation of legal argumentation. 91-95 - Tomasz Zurek:
Modelling of a fortiori reasoning. 96-100 - Michal Araszkiewicz:
Analogy, similarity and factors. 101-105 - Marc Lauritsen:
Intelligent tools for managing legal choices. 106-110 - Tommaso Agnoloni, Enrico Francesconi:
Modelling semantic profiles in legislative documents for enhanced norm accessibility. 111-115 - Mihai Surdeanu, Ramesh Nallapati, George Gregory, Joshua Walker, Christopher D. Manning:
Risk analysis for intellectual property litigation. 116-120 - Hajime Yoshino:
The systematization of law in terms of the validity. 121-125 - Robert C. Richards Jr., Thomas R. Bruce:
Adapting specialized legal metadata to the digital environment: the code of federal regulations parallel table of authorities and rules. 126-130 - Monica Palmirani, Guido Governatori, Giuseppe Contissa:
Modelling temporal legal rules. 131-135 - John Zeleznikow, Emilia Bellucci:
Classifying online dispute resolution through a comparison of family mediation and the Israel - Palestinian conflict. 136-140 - Jeroen Keppens:
On extracting arguments from Bayesian network representations of evidential reasoning. 141-150 - Edwina L. Rissland, Xiaoxi Xu:
Catching Gray Cygnets: an initial exploration. 151-160 - Matthias Grabmair, Kevin D. Ashley:
Facilitating case comparison using value judgments and intermediate legal concepts. 161-170 - Alexander Boer, Tom M. van Engers:
An agent-based legal knowledge acquisition methodology for agile public administration. 171-180 - Matthew Carey:
Modeling authority commitments in two search and seizure cases. 181-188 - Monica Palmirani, Marcello Ceci, Daniele Paolo Radicioni, Alessandro Mazzei:
FrameNet model of the suspension of norms. 189-193 - Brooke Abrahams, Peter Condliffe, John Zeleznikow:
Using an OWL ontology to support legal negotiation about owners corporation disputes. 194-198 - Michael Curtotti, Eric McCreath:
A corpus of Australian contract language: description, profiling and analysis. 199-208 - Max R. Kimbrough, Steven O. Kimbrough, Priscilla Murphy:
On using text analytics for event studies. 209-218 - Cameron Hughes, Tracey Hughes, Alina Lazar:
Discovering coherence and justification clusters in digital transcripts using epistemic analysis. 219-223 - Davide Carneiro, Paulo Novais, Francisco Andrade, José Neves:
Retrieving information in online dispute resolution platforms: a hybrid method. 224-228 - Bruce M. McLaren, Kevin D. Ashley:
Can temporal representation and reasoning make a difference in automated legal reasoning?: lessons from an AI-based ethical reasoner. 229-238 - Jack G. Conrad, Christopher Dozier, Hugo Molina-Salgado, Merine Thomas, Sriharsha Veeramachaneni:
Public record aggregation using semi-supervised entity resolution. 239-248 - Manisha Verma, Vasudeva Varma:
Applying key phrase extraction to aid invalidity search. 249-255
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.