[comp.lang.prolog] PROLOG DIGEST V6 #50

restivo@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU (Chuck Restivo) (07/19/88)

Date: Tue 19 Jul 1988 02:53-PST
From: Chuck Restivo (The Moderator) <PROLOG-REQUEST@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU>
Reply-to: PROLOG@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU>
US-Mail: P.O. Box 4584, Stanford CA  94305
Subject: PROLOG Digest   V6 #50
To: PROLOG@POLYA.STANFORD.EDU


PROLOG Digest           Tuesday, 19 Jul 1988      Volume 6 : Issue 50

Today's Topics:
                              Announcement - Law Conference
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Date: Fri, 15 Jul 88 13:21:05 EDT
From: carole hafner <hafner%corwin.ccs.northeastern.edu@RELAY.CS.NET>
Subject: Call for Papers
 
The field of AI and Law -- which seeks both to understand fundamental mechanisms 
of legal reasoning as well as to develop useful applications of AI to law -- 
is burgeoning with accomplishments in both basic research and practical 
applications. This increased activity is due in part to more widely available
AI technology, advances in fundamental techniques in AI and increased interest 
in the law as an ideal domain for studying certain issues central to AI.
The activities range from development of classic expert systems, intended as 
aids to lawyers and judges, to investigation of canonical elements of case-based 
and analogical reasoning. The study of AI and law both draws on and contributes 
to progress in basic concerns in AI, such as representation of common sense 
knowledge, example-based learning, explanation, and non-monotonic reasoning,
and in jurisprudence, such as the nature of legal rules and the doctrine 
of precedent.

The Second International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and 
Law (ICAIL-89) seeks to stimulate further collaboration between workers in 
both disciplines, provide a forum for sharing information at the cutting 
edge of research and applications, spur further research on fundamental 
problems in both the law and AI, and provide a continuing focus for the 
emerging AI and law community.

Authors are invited to contribute papers on topics such as the following:

-- Legal Expert Systems
-- Conceptual Information Retrieval
-- Case-Based Reasoning
-- Analogical Reasoning
-- Representation of Legal Knowledge
-- Computational Models of Legal Reasoning 

In addition, papers on relevant theoretical issues in AI (e.g., concept 
acquisition, mixed paradigm systems using rules and cases) and in 
jurisprudence/legal philosophy (e.g., open-textured predicates, reasoning 
with precedents and rules) are also invited provided that the relationship 
to both AI and Law is clearly demonstrated. It is important that all authors 
identify the original contributions presented in their papers, exhibit 
understanding of relevant past work, discuss the limitations as well as 
the promise of their ideas, and demonstrate that the ideas have matured 
beyond the proposal stage. Each submission will be reviewed by at least three 
members of the Program Committee and judged as to its originality, quality,
and significance.

Authors should submit six (6) copies of an Extended Abstract, which must include 
a full list of references, by January 10, 1989 to the Program Chair: 

      Edwina L. Rissland 
      Department of Computer and Information Science 
      University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, USA;
      (413) 545-0332, rissland@cs.umass.edu.

Submissions should be 6 to 8 pages in length, not including references. 
No electronic submissions can be accepted. Notification of acceptance or 
rejection will be sent out by early March. Final camera-ready copy of the 
complete paper (up to 15 pages) will be due by April 15, 1989.

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End of PROLOG Digest