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The refereed proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning, ICCBR 2003, held in Trondheim, Norway, in June 2003. The 51 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 92 submissions. All current aspects of CBR are addressed including case representation, similarity retrieval, adaptation, case library maintenance, multi-agent collaborative systems, data mining, soft computing, recommender systems, knowledge management, legal reasoning, software reuse, and music.
The field of artificial intelligence (AI) and the law is on the
cusp of a revolution that began with text analytic programs like
IBM's Watson and Debater and the open-source information management
architectures on which they are based. Today, new legal
applications are beginning to appear and this book - designed to
explain computational processes to non-programmers - describes how
they will change the practice of law, specifically by connecting
computational models of legal reasoning directly with legal text,
generating arguments for and against particular outcomes,
predicting outcomes and explaining these predictions with reasons
that legal professionals will be able to evaluate for themselves.
These legal applications will support conceptual legal information
retrieval and allow cognitive computing, enabling a collaboration
between humans and computers in which each does what it can do
best. Anyone interested in how AI is changing the practice of law
should read this illuminating work.
The field of artificial intelligence (AI) and the law is on the
cusp of a revolution that began with text analytic programs like
IBM's Watson and Debater and the open-source information management
architectures on which they are based. Today, new legal
applications are beginning to appear and this book - designed to
explain computational processes to non-programmers - describes how
they will change the practice of law, specifically by connecting
computational models of legal reasoning directly with legal text,
generating arguments for and against particular outcomes,
predicting outcomes and explaining these predictions with reasons
that legal professionals will be able to evaluate for themselves.
These legal applications will support conceptual legal information
retrieval and allow cognitive computing, enabling a collaboration
between humans and computers in which each does what it can do
best. Anyone interested in how AI is changing the practice of law
should read this illuminating work.
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