johnz@latcs1.lat.oz.au (John Zeleznikow) (05/22/91)
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND LAW - COURSE/WORKSHOP Lecturer: Professor Donald H Berman Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts Venue: La Trobe University Time: All afternoons during two weeks July 8 -19 1991 This course will involve designing and constructing legal information systems that provide intelligent advice. No prior knowledge is assumed. The course will consist of lectures, tutorials, laboratories and supervised practical work. Professor Berman is currently Richardson Professor of Law and the director of the Center for the Study of Law and Computer Science at Northeastern University in Boston Massachusetts. He is editor of the Journal "Artificial Intelligence and Law" and has been a key-note speaker at the International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law. Professor Berman will be supported by Dr. John Zeleznikow and Mr. George Vossos who have developed the IKBALS II Prototye. IKBALS II adds reasoning with precents into an object-oriented rule-based system which advises on the likelihood of successful claims under the Accident Compensation (Workcare) Act. The fee for the course is $950 ($495 for academic staff and $95 for students and unemployed people), and includes all use of software and hardware, written materials and meals and refreshments. For further information and registration forms contact: Dr. John Zeleznikow IKBALS Project Database Research Laboratory Applied Computing Research Institute La Trobe University Bundoora Victoria 3083 Australia Phone: 61.3.4791003 FAX: 61.3.4704915 ======================================================================= COURSE OUTLINE Seminar on Artificial Intelligence and Law Professor Donald H. Berman Richardson Professor of Law Northeastern University School of Law Co-director Northeastern University Center for Law & Computer Science July, 1991 I. INTRODUCTION This course investigates two questions: 1) what is the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on the legal profession and the legal system? 2) what is "legal reasoning" and how can it be represented in a form understandable by a computer. For computer science students interested in AI this course will provide insight and experience in modeling judgmental reasoning in a complex domain. For those interested in law this course enhances traditional lawyering skills by analyzing the lawyering process through the magnifying lens of AI. For both lawyers and computer scientists this course will offer the opportunity to explore methods for the more efficient delivery of legal services while providing the intellectual challenge of trying to develop formal models that explain how the legal systems works both in theory and practice. II. SUBJECTS COVERED A. A Historical and Conceptual Overview of AI & LAW. B. Basic Knowledge Representation. 1. Statutory Normalization - removing syntactic ambiguity from legal documents by use of logical formalisms. 2. Production Rules - The use of logical formalisms to represent legal rules. 3. The potential and limitations of logical models of legal rules. C. Working with cases I - 1. Extracting deep structure rules from cases. 2. Inducing rules from cases by computational means - the ID3 algorithm. D. Working with case II. 1. The use of frames and semantic nets. 2. Dimensions and the HYPO project. 3. Prototypes and Deformations. E. Predictive and Normative Expert Systems - What can Legal expert systems safely do? F. Conceptual Retrieval - Going beyond the constraints imposed by full text retrieval using boolean logic. G. Intelligent Document Assembly - How computer science can safely achieve enormous efficiencies in the here and now.