'Artificial intelligence approaches to the complexity of legal systems', Frankfurt, Germany
By building more precise models of legal concepts - from multilingual dictionaries to taxonomies and legal ontologies, namely formal models of legal conceptualisation - society can enhance comprehension of legal cultures, of their commonalities and differences.
The comparison of multiple formal approaches to the law comprises such fields as logical models, cognitive theories, argumentation frameworks, graph theory, complexity theory, cybernetics, game theory as well as opposite perspectives like the internal and the external viewpoints. They should also stress possible convergences in the realm of conceptual structures, argumentation schemes, emergent behaviours, learning evolution, adaptation and simulation.
The use of computer systems in this process can help manage legal knowledge, draw on convergences and bridge differences.
The event will be a forum for diverse researchers to discuss and share their findings and proposals on recent developments in artificial intelligence and law, legal theory, argumentation, the semantic web, and multi-agent systems.For further information, please visit: http://www.aicol.eu/(opens in new window)