MCCARTY@RED.RUTGERS.EDU (08/14/86)
CALL FOR PAPERS: First International Conference on ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND LAW May 27-29, 1987 Northeastern University Boston, Massachusetts, USA In recent years there has been an increased interest in the applications of artificial intelligence to law. Some of this interest is due to the potential practical applications: A number of researchers are developing legal expert systems, intended as an aid to lawyers and judges; other researchers are developing conceptual legal retrieval systems, intended as a complement to the existing full-text legal retrieval systems. But the problems in this field are very difficult. The natural language of the law is exceedingly complex, and it is grounded in the fundamental patterns of human common sense reasoning. Thus, many researchers have also adopted the law as an ideal problem domain in which to tackle some of the basic theoretical issues in AI: the representation of common sense concepts; the process of reasoning with concrete examples; the construction and use of analogies; etc. There is reason to believe that a thorough interdisciplinary approach to these problems will have significance for both fields, with both practical and theoretical benefits. The purpose of this First International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law is to stimulate further collaboration between AI researchers and lawyers, and to provide a forum for the latest research results in the field. The conference is sponsored by the Center for Law and Computer Science at Northeastern University. The General Chair is: Carole D. Hafner, College of Computer Science, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02115, USA; (617) 437-5116 or (617) 437-2462; hafner.northeastern@csnet-relay. Authors are invited to contribute papers on the following topics: - Legal Expert Systems - Conceptual Legal Retrieval Systems - Automatic Processing of Natural Legal Texts - Computational Models of Legal Reasoning In addition, papers on the relevant theoretical issues in AI are also invited, if the relationship to the law can be clearly demonstrated. It is important that authors identify the original contributions presented in their papers, and that they include a comparison with previous work. Each submission will be reviewed by at least three members of the Program Committee (listed below), and judged as to its originality, quality and significance. Authors should submit six (6) copies of an Extended Abstract (6 to 8 pages) by January 15, 1987, to the Program Chair: L. Thorne McCarty, Department of Computer Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick NJ 08903, USA; (201) 932-2657; mccarty@rutgers.arpa. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent out by March 1, 1987. Final camera-ready copy of the complete paper (up to 15 pages) will be due by April 15, 1987. Conference Chair: Carole D. Hafner Northeastern University Program Chair: L. Thorne McCarty Rutgers University Program Committee: Donald H. Berman Northeastern University Michael G. Dyer UCLA Edwina L. Rissland University of Massachusetts Marek J. Sergot Imperial College, London Donald A. Waterman The RAND Corporation -------