AI4J - Artificial Intelligence for Justice

#artificialintelligence 

One day, filled with a mix of invited talks and presentations of peer-reviewed papers. Invited speaker Karl Branting The MITRE Corporation, USA Accepted papers (full, position and short) Sudhir Agarwal, Kevin Xu and John Moghtader Toward Machine-Understandable Contracts Trevor Bench-Capon Value-Based Reasoning and the Evolution of Norms Trevor Bench-Capon and Sanjay Modgil Rules are Made to be Broken Markus Fatalin Product Liability for Autonomous Systems in Europe Raghav Kalyanasundaram, Krishna Reddy P and Balakista Reddy V Analysis for Extracting Relevant Legal Judgments using Paragraph-level and Citation Information Niels Netten, Susan van Den Braak, Sunil Choenni and Frans Leeuw The Rise of Smart Justice: on the Role of AI in the Future of Legal Logistics Marc van Opijnen and Cristiana Santos On the Concept of Relevance in Legal Information Retrieval Livio Robaldo and Xin Sun Reified Input/Output logic - a position paper Olga Shulayeva, Advaith Siddharthan and Adam Wyner Recognizing Cited Facts and Principles in Legal Judgements Pieter Slootweg, Lloyd Rutledge, Lex Wedemeijer and Stef Joosten The Implementation of Hohfeldian Legal Concepts with Semantic Web Technologies Floris Bex, Joeri Peters and Bas Testerink A.I for Online Criminal Complaints: from Natural Dialogues to Structured Scenarios Robert van Doesburg, Tijs van der Storm and Tom van Engers CALCULEMUS: Towards a Formal Language for the Interpretation of Normative Systems Henry Prakken On how AI & law can help autonomous systems obey the law: a position paper Giovanni Sileno, Alexander Boer and Tom Van Engers Reading Agendas Between the Lines, an Exercise Bart Verheij Formalizing Correct Evidential Reasoning with Arguments, Scenarios and Probabilities