2010 ALegalCaseOWLontology
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- (Wyner & Hoekstra, 2010) ⇒ Adam Wyner, Rinke Hoekstra. (2010). “A Legal Case OWL Ontology with an Instantiation of Popov v. Hayashi.” Knowledge Engineering Review, 14(2).
Subject Headings: Legal Ontology, Legal Case Ontology.
Notes
- It recommends that the focus of a legal ontology should be on information which has a legal definition or function.
- (not, high-level, non-legal domain information such as events/processes, causation, time, etc.)
Cited By
- (Wyner, 2010) ⇒ Adam Wyner. (2010). “Towards Annotating and Extracting Textual Legal Case Elements.” In: Proceedings of the 4th Workshop on Legal Ontologies and Artificial Intelligence Techniques (LOAIT 2010).
Quotes
Abstract
- The paper provides an OWL ontology for legal cases with an instantiation of the legal case Popov v. Hayashi. The ontology makes explicit the conceptual knowledge of the legal case domain, supports reasoning about the domain, and can be used to annotate the text of cases, which in turn can be used to populate the ontology. A populated ontology is a case base which can be used for information retrieval, information extraction, and case based reasoning. The ontology contains not only elements of indexing the case (e.g. the parties, jurisdiction, and date), but as well elements used to reason to a decision such as argument schemes and the components input to the schemes. We use the Protégé ontology editor and knowledge acquisition system, current guidelines for ontology development, and tools for visual and linguistic presentation of the ontology.
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Author | volume | Date Value | title | type | journal | titleUrl | doi | note | year | |
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2010 ALegalCaseOWLontology | Adam Wyner Rinke Hoekstra | A Legal Case OWL Ontology with an Instantiation of Popov v. Hayashi | http://wyner.info/research/Papers/WynerHoekstraKER2010Ontology.pdf | 2010 |