Posts Tagged ‘Artificial intelligence’

Call for Papers: ICAIL 2011

September 8th, 2010
University of Pittsburgh Seal
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13th International Conference on
Artificial Intelligence & Law (ICAIL 2011)
June 6 – June 10, 2011
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
http://www.law.pitt.edu/icail2011

Call for Papers

The field of AI and Law is concerned with the study of legal reasoning using computational methods; computational models of argumentation; knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining; and the formal representation of norms, normative actions, normative systems, norm-governed societies, and multi-agent systems. The field also includes the investigation of techniques from advanced information technology, using law as the illustrative domain; and applications of advanced information technology to support tasks in the legal domain.

ICAIL provides a forum for the presentation and discussion of the latest research results and practical applications and stimulates interdisciplinary and international collaboration. Previous ICAIL conferences have been held biennially since 1987, with proceedings published by ACM. The journal Artificial Intelligence and Law regularly publishes expanded versions of selected ICAIL papers.

For more information about this call, see the conference website.

ICAIL Workshops and Tutorials

ICAIL 2011 will include workshops and tutorials on the first and last days. Proposals for workshops and tutorials are invited, and should be sent to the Program Chair. Tutorials should cover a broad topic of relevance to the AI and Law community. Proposals should contain enough information to permit evaluation on the basis of importance, quality, and community interest. Each workshop should have one or more designated organizers and a program or organizing committee. Proposals should be about 2 to 4 pages and include at least the following information

  • The workshop or tutorial topic and goals, their significance, and their appropriateness for ICAIL 2011
  • The intended audience, including the areas from which participants may come, the likely number of participants (with some of their names, if known), and plans for publicizing the workshop
  • Organization of the workshop or tutorial, including the intended format (such as invited talks, presentations, panel discussions, or other methods for ensuring an interactive atmosphere) and the expected length (full day or half day)
  • Organizers’ details: a description of the main organizers’ background in the proposed topic; and complete addresses including web pages of all organizers and committee members (if applicable).

Mentoring Program for ICAIL 2011

The International Association for AI and Law will offer a mentoring program for papers being submitted to the ICAIL conference. The mentoring program is intended primarily for junior authors who have not previously published an Artificial Intelligence and Law paper at a conference or in a journal.

Important Dates

These dates are tentative and subject to change

  • Mentoring program request deadline: November 8, 2010
  • Mentoring program paper deadline: November 15, 2010
  • Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals: December 6, 2010
  • Submission of abstracts (optional): January 3, 2011
  • Submission of papers deadline: January 10, 2011
  • Notification of acceptance: tba
  • Final revised and formatted papers due: tba
  • Conference: June 6 – June 10, 2011

Submission Details

Papers should not exceed 5000 words. If an approved style file is used, the maximum length is 10 pages. Style format template files can be found athttp://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html. Papers should be submitted by the above paper submission deadline, in PDF or MS Word format.

To aid the reviewing process, authors are requested to submit abstracts of their papers by the above abstract submission deadline. Abstracts should include at least the title of the paper, up to four keywords, and a contact address for the author.

Both papers and abstracts should be submitted electronically to the conference support system (details to be announced).

Authors will be notified of the referees’ decision in March 2011. Papers not accepted for full publication and presentation may be accepted as short research abstracts. Papers (including research abstracts) must be presented at the conference in order to appear in the proceedings. Final versions of papers for publication in the proceedings will be due in April 2011.

Donald H. Berman Award for Best Student Paper

To encourage participation by students, IAAIL has created the Donald H. Berman Award for the best paper submitted to ICAIL by a student or students. The award consists of a cash gift and free attendance at ICAIL 2011. For a paper to be considered for the award, the student author(s) should be clearly designated as such when the paper is submitted, and any nonstudent co-authors should provide a statement that the paper is primarily student work. Notification will be made through the ICAIL website, and the award will be presented at the conference banquet.

Conference Officials

Program Chair
Tom van Engers
Leibniz Center for Law/Faculty of Law
University of Amsterdam
http://www.leibnizcenter.org
vanengers@uva.nl

Conference Chair
Kevin D. Ashley
Professor of Law and Intelligent Systems
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
ashley@pitt.edu

Secretary/Treasurer
Anne Gardner
Atherton, California, USA
gardner.anne@sbcglobal.net

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Jurix 2010: Deadline Extension

September 3rd, 2010

The deadline for Jurix 2010 submissions has been extended to September 12th. Please refer to the conference website for more information.

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Call for Papers: Jurix 2010

June 8th, 2010

JURIX 2010 - The 23rd International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems

Liverpool
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University of Liverpool (U.K.), 16th-17th December 2010

http://conference.jurix.nl/2010

For more than 20 years the Jurix Conference has provided an international forum for academics and practitioners in the field of legal informatics for sharing ideas and experiences on the representation of legal content and its representation in computer systems. We invite submission of original papers on the advanced management of legal information and knowledge (foundations, methods, tools, systems and applications). For a list of potential topics see the conference web site.

Papers should be submitted through the Jurix Conference Management System, using PDF, PostScript or Word format, and should not exceed 10 pages when formatted using the styles and guidelines in the Instructions for Authors.

The conference proceedings will be published by IOS Press (Amsterdam, Berlin, Oxford, Tokyo, Washington DC) in their series “Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications” before the Conference.

Program Committee Chair
Radboud Winkels, Leibniz Center for Law, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Organisation Committee Chair
Katie Atkinson, University of Liverpool, U.K.

Important Dates

  • August 29th, 2010 Deadline for submission of abstracts
  • September 5th, 2010 Deadline for submission of papers
  • September 19th, 2010 Deadline for submission of tutorials, workshops and demonstration proposals
  • October 1st, 2010 Notification of paper acceptance
  • October 17th, 2010 Camera-ready papers due
  • December (14th and) 15th, 2010 Jurix Workshops/Tutorials
  • December 16th-17th, 2010 Jurix 2010 Main Conference
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Call for Papers: JURISIN 2010

June 7th, 2010
Greater Tokyo Area is the world's most populou...
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Fourth International Workshop on Juris-informatics(JURISIN 2010)
Nov. 18-19, 2010
Campus Innovation Center Tokyo
Tokyo, Japan
with a support of The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence
in association with Second JSAI International Symposia on AI
(JSAI-isAI 2010)
http://ai-gakkai.or.jp/jsai-isai/2010/
Aims and scope
Juris-informatics is a new research area which studies legal issues from
the perspective of informatics.
The purpose of this workshop is to discuss both the fundamental and
practical issues for juris-informatics among people from the various
backgrounds such as law, social science, information and intelligent
technology, logic and philosophy, including the conventional “AI and
law” area.
We solicit unpublished papers on theories, technologies and applications
on juris-informatics.
Topics
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
* Legal reasoning
* Argumentation/Argumentation agent
* Legal term ontology
* Formal legal knowledge-base/Intelligent management of legal knowledge-base
* Translation of legal documents
* Computer-aided law education
* Use of Informatics and AI in law
* Legal issues on ubiquitous computing/multi-agent system/the Internet
* Social implications of use of informatics and AI in law
Submissions
We welcome and encourage the submission of high quality, original
papers, which are not simultaneously submitted for publication
elsewhere. Papers should be written in English, formatted according to
the Springer Verlag LNCS style in a pdf form , which can be obtained
from http://www.springeronline.com, and not exceed 12 pages including
figures, references, etc.
If you use a word file, please follow the instruction of the format,
and then convert it into a pdf form and submit it to
the designated page which will be announced later.
If a paper is accepted, at least one author of the paper must register
the workshop and present it.
Proceedings
A printed volume of the proceedings with ISBN will be available at the
workshop.
Post Proceedings
We are now negotiating with Springer Verlag about publishing selected
papers of the workshop as a volume of LNAI. If it is the case, the
authors of papers presented at the workshop will be asked to extend
their contributions, possibly incorporating the results of the workshop
discussion, to be included in the workshop post-proceedings, after
another round of refereeing.
Note that the selected papers of the first and the second workshops have
been published as volumes of LNAI4914 and LNAI5447 respectively and the
selected papers of the third workshop is now under editing for LNAI
publication.
Financial Support for Students
We have received some budget from JSAI for partial economical support
for travelling costs for promising foreign students whose papers have
been accepted to be presented at JURISIN2010. The amount of the whole
support is 200,000 yen and we divide it to students who need a support.
The actual support will vary based on the number of applicants and
where students come from.
Important Dates
* Submission Deadline: September 13, 2010 *
Notification: October 12, 2010
Camera Ready Copy due: October 19, 2010
JURISIN 2010: November 18-19, 2010
Workshop Chair
Satoshi Tojo, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology(JAIST),
Japan
Organizing Committee Members
Katsumi Nitta, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics and Sokendai, Japan
Seiichiro Sakurai, Meiji Gakuin University, Japan
Programme Committee Members
Phan Minh Dung, AIT, Thailand
Guido Governatori, University of Queensland, Australia
Tokuyasu Kakuta, Nagoya University, Japan
Luong Chi Mai, IOIT, Vietnam
Makoto Nakamura, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan
Katsumi Nitta, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
Shozo Ohta, University of Tokyo, Japan
Henry Prakken, University of Utrecht & Groningen, The Netherlands
Seiichiro Sakurai, Meiji Gakuin University, Japan
Giovanni Sartor, European University Institute, Italy
Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics and Sokendai, Japan
Hajime Sawamura, Niigata University, Japan
Akira Shimazu, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan
Nuanwan Soonthornphisaj, Ksetsart University, Thailand
Fumihiko Takahashi, Meiji Gakuin University, Japan
Satoshi Tojo, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan
Katsuhiko Toyama, Nagoya University, Japan
John Zeleznikow, Victoria University, Australia
Home page of JURISIN 2010:
http://research.nii.ac.jp/~ksatoh/jurisin2010.html
preivous JURISIN workshops
JURISIN2007 http://research.nii.ac.jp/~ksatoh/jurisin.html
JURISIN2008 http://www.ntt.dis.titech.ac.jp/jurisin2008/
JURISIN2009 http://research.nii.ac.jp/~ksatoh/jurisin2009.html
For any inquiry, please send it to “jurisin2010 at nii.ac.jp”.
===========================================

Fourth International Workshop on Juris-informatics(JURISIN 2010)

Nov. 18-19, 2010
Campus Innovation Center Tokyo
Tokyo, Japan

http://research.nii.ac.jp/~ksatoh/jurisin2010.html

With a support of The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence, in association with Second JSAI International Symposia on AI (JSAI-isAI 2010)

http://ai-gakkai.or.jp/jsai-isai/2010/

Aims and scope

Juris-informatics is a new research area which studies legal issues from the perspective of informatics. The purpose of this workshop is to discuss both the fundamental and practical issues for juris-informatics among people from the various backgrounds such as law, social science, information and intelligent technology, logic and philosophy, including the conventional “AI and law” area.

We solicit unpublished papers on theories, technologies and applications on juris-informatics.

Topics

Relevant topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Legal reasoning
  • Argumentation/Argumentation agent
  • Legal term ontology
  • Formal legal knowledge-base/Intelligent management of legal knowledge-base
  • Translation of legal documents
  • Computer-aided law education
  • Use of Informatics and AI in law
  • Legal issues on ubiquitous computing/multi-agent system/the Internet
  • Social implications of use of informatics and AI in law

Submissions

We welcome and encourage the submission of high quality, original papers, which are not simultaneously submitted for publication elsewhere.

Important Dates

Submission Deadline:
September 13, 2010

Notification:
October 12, 2010

Camera Ready Copy due:
October 19, 2010

JURISIN 2010:
November 18-19, 2010

Workshop Chair

Satoshi Tojo, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology(JAIST), Japan

Organizing Committee Members

  • Katsumi Nitta, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
  • Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics and Sokendai, Japan
  • Seiichiro Sakurai, Meiji Gakuin University, Japan

For any enquiry, please send it to “jurisin2010 at nii.ac.jp”.

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LOAIT 2010 Workshop

May 10th, 2010

4th Workshop on Legal Ontologies and Artificial Intelligence Techniques
“Legal Concepts and Ontologies: knowledge representation, comparison, harmonization and learning”

http://www.ittig.cnr.it/loait/loait10.html

July 7th, 2010, Fiesole (Florence), Italy
Paper submission: May 3rd, 2010 (***Extended deadline: May 16th, 2010***)

held in conjunction with Deon-10
http://defeasible.org/deon2010/


The LOAIT workshop aims to offer an overview of theories and well-founded applications that combine Legal Ontologies and AI techniques, with regard both to theories and implementations.
Over the last years the management of legal information has been significantly influenced by approaches from Artificial Intelligence (AI). In particular, legal reasoning, advanced semantic and cross-language legal information retrieval, legal drafting and document classification, have proved to be fertile areas where ontologies are successfully applied.

Important Dates
* May 3rd, 2010: Paper submission (***Extended deadline: May 16th, 2010***)
* May 26th, 2010: Notification of acceptance (***Postponed: June 9th, 2010***)
* June 7th, 2010: Camera-ready paper (***Postponed: June 23rd, 2010***)
* July 7th, 2010: Workshop

Program Chairs
Enrico Francesconi (Institute of Legal Information Theory and Techniques (ITTIG-CNR) Florence, Italy)
Simonetta Montemagni (Institute of Computational Linguistics (ILC-CNR), PISA, Italy)
Piercarlo Rossi (University of Oriental Piedmont, Italy)
Daniela Tiscornia (Legal Information Theory and Techniques (ITTIG-CNR) Florence, Italy)

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ICAIL 2011 Conference

April 19th, 2010
The Barco Law Building: Home of the University...
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ICAIL 2011: The 13th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, will be held 6-10 June 2011 at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

(thanks to the legal informatics blog for posting)

For more information, please see the conference Website, or the IAAIL website.

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Jurix 2009 – Accepted Papers

October 9th, 2009

The following papers have been accepted for the Jurix 2009 conference. Registration details will follow shortly on the conference website.

Accepted as Full Papers:
Author(s) Title
Barabucci, Gioele; Vitali, Fabio XDTD as a Simple Validation Language for XML-based Legal Documents
Bench-Capon, Trevor; Prakken, Henry A case study of hypothetical and value-based reasoning in US Supreme-Court cases
Boella, Guido; Pigozzi, Gabriella; Van der Torre, Leon Five Guidelines for Normative Multiagent Systems
Burgemeestre, Brigitte; Hulstijn, Joris; Tan, Yao-Hua Rule-based versus Principle-based Regulatory Compliance
de Maat, Emile; van de Ven, Saskia; Winkels, Radboud Automated Handling of Amending Documents and Resulting Consolidations
Francesconi, Enrico An Approach to Legal Rules Modelling and Automatic Learning
Hoekstra, Rinke BestPortal: Lessons Learned in Lightweight Semantic Access to Court Proceedings
Jedrzejek, Czeslaw; Falkowski, Maciej; Smolenski, Maciej Link Analysis of Fuel Laundering Scams and Implications of Results for Scheme Understanding and Prosecutor Strategy
Keppens, Jeroen Conceptions of Vagueness in Subjective Probability for Evidential Reasoning
Lynch, Collin; Ashley, Kevin D.; Pinkwart, Niels; Aleven, Vincent Argument Diagramming and Complex Statements: The Challenges of Reification.
Mayor, Eunate; Izquierdo, Luis; Sartor, Giovanni Nice and Nasty Lawyers, is the legal system to blame? Agent-based simulation insights
Opsomer, Rob; De Meyer, Geert; Cornelis, Chris; Van Eetvelde, Greet Exploiting Properties of Legislative Texts to Improve Classification Accuracy
Palmirani, Monica; Cervone, Luca Legal Change Management with Native XML Repository
Satoh, Ken; Kubota, Masahiro; Nishigai, Yoshiaki; Takano, Chiaki Translating the Japanese Presupposed Ultimate Fact Theory into Logic Programming
Sonntag, Michael Generating cases for E-Learning
Accepted as Short Papers:
Author(s) Title
Boer, Alexander W. F. MetaLex Naming Conventions and the Semantic Web
Carneiro, Davide; Novais, Paulo; Andrade, Francisco; Zeleznikow, John; Neves, José The Legal Precedent in Online Dispute Resolution
Förhécz, András; Kőrösi, Gábor; Millinghoffer, András; Strausz, György Emerald: Legal Knowledge Engineering Using OWL and Rules
Liebwald, Doris An Ontology for the Transposition of the EU Services Directive
Scarpato, Noemi; Pazienza, Maria Teresa; Stellato, Armando STIA: Experience of Semantic Annotation in Jurisprudence Domain
Ven, Saskia van de; Boer, Alexander; Engers, Tom van Change Management in a networked Environment
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