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7. ICAIL 1999: Oslo, Norway
- Jon Bing, Andrew J. I. Jones, Thomas F. Gordon:
Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, ICAIL '99, Oslo, Norway, June 14-17, 1999. ACM 1999, ISBN 1-58113-165-8 - Karl Branting:
A generative model of narrative cases. 1-8 - Stefanie Brüninghaus, Kevin D. Ashley:
Toward adding knowledge to learning algorithms for indexing legal cases. 9-17 - Andrew Stranieri, John Zeleznikow:
The evaluation of legal knowledge based systems. 18-24 - Edwina L. Rissland:
I yield one minute...: an analysis of the final speeches from the House impeachment hearings. 25-35 - Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon:
Some observations on modelling case based reasoning with formal argument models. 36-42 - Bart Verheij:
Automated argument assistance for lawyers. 43-52 - Hadassa Jakobovits, Dirk Vermeir:
Dialectic semantics for argumentation frameworks. 53-62 - John F. Horty:
Precedent, deontic logic, and inheritance. 63-72 - Laurence Cholvy:
Checking regulation consistency by using SOL-resolution. 73-79 - Layman E. Allen, Charles S. Saxon:
Application of enriched deontic legal relations: Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 7(a), pleadings. 80-89 - Rafaél Hernández Marín, Giovanni Sartor:
Time and norms: a formalisation in the event-calculus. 90-99 - Marius J. A. Duker, Arno R. Lodder:
Sentencing and information management: consistency and the particularities of a case. 100-107 - Emilia Bellucci, John Zeleznikow:
AI techniques for modelling legal negotiation. 108-116 - John Yearwood, Andrew Stranieri:
The integration of retrieval, reasoning and drafting for refugee law: a third generation legal knowledge based system. 117-125 - Anja Oskamp, Maaike Tragter, Arno R. Lodder:
Mutual benefits for AI & law and knowledge management. 126-127 - K. C. Mukherjee:
Automating forms publishing with the Intelligent Filing Manager. 128-129 - Graham Greenleaf, Philip Chung, Daniel Austin, Russell Allen, Andrew Mowbray:
With a wysh and a prayer: an experiment in cooperative development of legal knowledgebases. 130-131 - Katsumi Nitta, Masato Shibasaki, Akira Yamazaki, Yoshiaki Yasumura:
A legal negotiation support system. 132-133 - Mohamed T. Elhadi, Tibor Vámos:
Bankruptcy case law: a hybrid IR-CBR approach. 134-135 - Marco Costa, José Neves, Orlando Sousa, Simas Santos:
Verification and normalization of sentences. 136-137 - Khalid Al-Kofahi, Brian Grom, Peter Jackson:
Anaphora resolution in the extraction of treatment history language from court opinions by partial parsing. 138-146 - Tânia C. D'Agostini Bueno, Christiane Gresse von Wangenheim, Eduardo da Silva Mattos, Hugo Cesar Hoeschl, Ricardo Miranda Barcia:
JurisConsulto: retrieval in jurisprudencial text bases using juridical terminology. 147-155 - Erich Schweighofer, Dieter Merkl:
A learning technique for legal document analysis. 156-163 - Rosina Weber:
Intelligent jurisprudence research: a new concept. 164-172 - James Osborn, Leon Sterling:
JUSTICE: a judicial search tool using intelligent concept extraction. 173-181 - Radboud Winkels, D. J. B. Bosscher, A. W. F. Boer, J. A. Breuker:
Generating exception structures for legal information serving. 182-189 - Paulo Quaresma, Irene Pimenta Rodrigues:
A collaborative legal information retrieval system using dynamic logic programming. 190-191 - Lambèr M. M. Royakkers, Frank Dignum:
From collective to individual commitments. 192-193 - Laurens Mommers, H. Jaap van den Herik:
Knowledge criteria for the evaluation of legal beliefs. 194-195 - Tokuyasu Kakuta, Makoto Haraguchi:
A demonstration of a legal reasoning system based on teleological analogies. 196-205 - Yaakov HaCohen-Kerner, Uri J. Schild, John Zeleznikow:
Developing computational models of discretion to build legal knowledge based systems. 206-213 - Karl Branting, Charles B. Callaway, Bradford W. Mott, James C. Lester:
Integrating discourse and domain knowledge for document drafting. 214-220
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