Martyn Lloyd-Kelly and I have a forthcoming paper on arguing about emotions in legal cases where the ‘heat of passion’ plays a role. It appears in the proceedings of the Workshop on User Models for Motivational Systems the affective and the rational routes to persuasion.
Arguing about Emotions
Martyn Lloyd-Kelly and Adam Wyner
Abstract
Emotions are commonly thought to be beyond rational analysis. In this paper, we develop the position that emotions can be the objects of argumentation and used as terms in emotional argumentation schemes. Thus, we can argue about whether or not, according to normative standards and available evidence, it is plausible that an individual had a particular emotion. This is particularly salient in legal cases, where decisions can depend on explicit arguments about emotional states.
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Author: Adam Wyner
Papers Accepted to the JURIX 2011 Conference
My colleagues and I have had two papers (one long and one short) accepted for presentation at The 24th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems (JURIX 2011). The papers are available on the links.
On Rule Extraction from Regulations
Adam Wyner and Wim Peters
Abstract
Rules in regulations such as found in the US Federal Code of Regulations can be expressed using conditional and deontic rules. Identifying and extracting such rules from the language of the source material would be useful for automating rulebook management and translating into an executable logic. The paper presents a linguistically-oriented, rule-based approach, which is in contrast to a machine learning approach. It outlines use cases, discusses the source materials, reviews the methodology, then provides initial results and future steps.
Populating an Online Consultation Tool
Sarah Pulfrey-Taylor, Emily Henthorn, Katie Atkinson, Adam Wyner, and Trevor Bench-Capon
Abstract
The paper addresses the extraction, formalisation, and presentation of public policy arguments. Arguments are extracted from documents that comment on public policy proposals. Formalising the information from the arguments enables the construction of models and systematic analysis of the arguments. In addition, the arguments are represented in a form suitable for presentation in an online consultation tool. Thus, the forms in the consultation correlate with the formalisation and can be evaluated accordingly. The stages of the process are outlined with reference to a working example.
Shortlink to this page.
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Workshop on Modelling Policy-making (MPM 2011)
In conjunction with
The 24th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems (JURIX 2011)
Wednesday December 14, 2011
University of Vienna
Vienna, Austria
Context:
As the European Union develops, issues about governance, legitimacy, and transparency become more pressing. National governments and the EU Commission realise the need to promote widespread, deliberative democracy in the policy-making cycle, which has several phases: 1) agenda setting, 2) policy analysis, 3) lawmaking, 4) administration and implementation, and 5) monitoring. As governments must become more efficient and effective with the resources available, modern information and communications technology (ICT) are being drawn on to address problems of information processing in the phases. One of the key problems is policy content analysis and modelling, particularly the gap between on the one hand policy proposals and formulations that are expressed in quantitative and narrative forms and on the other hand formal models that can be used to systematically represent and reason with the information contained in the proposals and formulations.
Submission Focus:
The workshop invites submissions of original research about the application of ICT to the early phases of the policy cycle, namely those before the legislators fix the legislation: agenda setting, policy analysis, and lawmaking. The research should seek to address the gap noted above. The workshop focuses particularly on using and integrating a range of subcomponents – information extraction, text processing, representation, modelling, simulation, reasoning, and argument – to provide policy making tools to the public and public administrators.
Intended Audience:
Legal professionals, government administrators, political scientists, and computer scientists.
Areas of Interest:
- information extraction from natural language text
- policy ontologies
- formal logical representations of policies
- transformations from policy language to executable policy rules
- argumentation about policy proposals
- web-based tools that support participatory policy-making
- tools for increasing public understanding of arguments behind policy decisions
- visualising policies and arguments about policies
- computational models of policies and arguments about policies
- integration tools
- multi-agent policy simulations
Preliminary Workshop Schedule:
09:45-10:00 Workshop Opening comments
10:00-11:00 Paper Session 1
- Using PolicyCommons to support the policy-consultation process: investigating a new workflow and policy-deliberation data model
Neil Benn and Ann Macintosh - A Problem Solving Model for Regulatory Policy Making
Alexander Boer, Tom Van Engers and Giovanni Sileno
11:00-11:15 Break (coffee, tea, air etc.)
11:15-12:15 Paper Session 2
- Linking Semantic Enrichment to Legal Documents
Akos Szoke, Andras Forhecz, Krisztian Macsar and Gyorgy Strausz - Semantic Models and Ontologies in Modelling Policy-making
Adam Wyner, Katie Atkinson and Trevor Bench-Capon
12:15-13:15 Lunch break
13:15-14:45 Paper Session 3
- Consistent Conceptual Descriptions to Support Formal Policy Model Development: Metamodel and Approach
Sabrina Scherer and Maria Wimmer - The Policy Modeling Tool of the IMPACT Argumentation Toolbox
Thomas Gordon - Ontologies for Governance, Risk Management and Policy Compliance
Jorge Gonzalez-Conejero, Albert Merono-Penuela and David Fernandez Gamez
14:45-15:00 Break (coffee, tea, air etc.)
15:00-16:00 Paper Session 4 and Closing discussion
- Policy making: How rational is it?
Tom Van Engers, Ignace Snellen and Wouter Van Haaften - Closing discussion
Workshop Registration and Location:
Please see the JURIX 2011 website for all information about registration and location.
Webpage URL:
http://wyner.info/LanguageLogicLawSoftware/?p=1157
Important Dates:
- Submission: Monday, October 24
- Review Notification: Monday, November 7
- Final Version: Thursday, December 1
- Workshop date: Wednesday, December 14
Author Guidelines:
Submit position papers of between 2-5 pages in length in PDF format and using the IOS Press style files and authors’ guidelines at:
IOS Press Author Instructions
Submit papers to:
MPM 2011 on EasyChair
Publication:
The position papers are available only in an electronic version from the following link:
Proceedings of the Workshop on Modelling Policy-making
A call for selected extended versions of the papers will be issued for a special issue of AI and Law on Modelling Policy-making.
Contact Information:
Adam Wyner, adam@wyner.info
Neil Benn, n.j.l.benn@leeds.ac.uk
Program Committee Co-Chairs:
Adam Wyner (University of Liverpool, UK)
Neil Benn (University of Leeds, UK)
Program Committee (Preliminary):
Katie Atkinson
Trevor Bench-Capon
Bruce Edmonds
Tom van Engers
Euripidis Loukis
Tom Gordon
Ann Macintosh
Gunther Schefbeck
Maria Wimmer
Radboud Winkels
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Draft Materials for LEX 2011
Draft post
At the links below, you can find the slides and hands on materials on GATE for the LEX summer school on Managing Legal Resources in the Semantic Web.
GATE Legislative Rulebook
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
TO BE UPDATED: Instructions for Online Collaborative Legal Case Annotation Task
TO BE UPDATED for the SPLeT 2012 task. The information here and in the links here are out of date. The material is being updated for the task, so please return at a later date or email the authors. Thanks for your interest.
— Adam
Wim Peters and I ran a pilot experiment in online, collaborative annotation for legal case factors. The slides are below. Now that we know more about how to present such materials, we need to find a cooperative population of law students to scale up and deepen the work.
Annotating Legal Case Factors with GATE TeamWare
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
LOAIT Workshop Paper on Legal Text Annotation
A paper I presented at 4th Workshop on Legal Ontologies and Artificial Intelligence Techniques is to appear in the journal Rivista Informatica e diritto, an Italian journal on AI and Law.
Towards Annotating and Extracting Textual Legal Case Elements
Adam Wyner
Abstract
The paper presents an outline of a method for semantic, conceptual search in legal case documents using the GATE tool.
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
On ICAIL 2011 Discussion on Legal Corpus Development and Text Analytics
In this note, I point to various parts of a discussion on developing and analysing legal textual data raised at ICAIL 2011. Please feel free to add comments to this document (or to me in person, by email, on your blog and linked to this, etc), which I can then add to the post (I’m very happy to attribute contributions). The intention is to stimulate discussion on these matters to help the community of researchers move ahead on common interests.
Corpus Development
Unlike the situation from several years ago, we have accessible sources of large corpora of legal textual information. The World Legal Information Institutes provide free, independent and non-profit access to worldwide law. For example, one can go to the US site and download cases: United States v Grant [1961] USCA9 19; 286 F.2d 157 (19 January 1961); one can request zipped files or screen scrap cases. The LIIs have introduced standardised references and formats for cases. There are boolean and regex searches.
From the contacts that I have had (e.g. in the US and UK), the LIIs would be very happy to collaborate with academic researchers in the analysis of their data and in keeping with their primary mission. In particular, developing tools that can be integrated and deployed with their platforms might be a way to go, thereby addressing significant platform and dissemination issues.
Another source of corpora is public.resource.org, which distributes a range of corpora covering legislation, codes, and cases.
Analysis and Annotation
There are a range of issues about information retrieval and extraction. Others can speak about IR, statistical, machine learning approaches. What I know better is annotation, whether fully or semi automatic and manual. Here we have issues about what to annotate and how. Some low level information is unproblematic (e.g. entities of a range of sorts, sections, and sentiment); higher level information (e.g. factors) might be more complex. I have some suggestions for annotations for low level information; a good starting point for factors are the CATO factors, though there is a general issue about how to extend factor identification to other domains (CATO factors are specific for intellectual property).
One general problem with analysis is that different researchers might use different tools in their work and just report the results. This means results are not interchangeable, which is particularly problematic with annotation work. If a common ‘framework’ tool is used and some consensus is developed about (at least) low level annotation types, then work can proceed more collaboratively, transparently, and reproducibly. One can develop a more forceful argument for researchers (public service bodies and information providers) to promote such an open development methodology (among them are justification and traceability, see Wyner and Peters 2010 and David Lewis’s ICAIL 2011 keynote address on related points). General Architecture for Text Engineering is an open framework for text processing modules.
There are ‘open’ systems for text annotation — Open Calais and Open Up platform’s data enrichment service from The Stationery Office. However, there are intellectual property issues that need to be considered.
Another general issue is how to carry out manual annotation, for example to build gold standards, which are required for machine learning systems. There has been significant progress, for example, with TeamWare, which provides for curated, web-based annotation tools along with annotation analysis (e.g. inter-annotator agreement). For a short tutorial (for an experiment) on using TeamWare for annotation of some legal case factors, see Web-based Annotation Support for the Law. Wim Peters and I proposed to law school faculty to use this tool to support their student exercises for first and second year students since these exercises often require identifying and extracting information from cases. Wim and I think integrating annotation exercises into legal e-learning could both help to develop large annotated sets of data and to serve an important educational purpose. See our paper about some of these points and proposals.
Research Questions
Large corpora can be formed, tools can be applied to them, but for fund raising, the community needs to develop a range of motivating research questions and use cases. Asides from questions pursued in the AI and Law community, we might consult further with public bodies (National Center for State Courts and similar), legal information service providers (Lexis-Nexis, ThomsonReuters, Practical Law Company, law societies, political scientists, etc. The kinds of answers we look for partially guide how we structure not only the corpora, but moreso the annotations.
Funding Opportunities
Digging into Data and the Request for Proposals, but the due date is June 16 (I had been working on a proposal, but needed better research questions to hold local interest). Though the deadline is too soon to submit a proposal, it does demonstrate a widespread interest in funding bodies in the development and analysis of large corpora in the humanities and social sciences. The other obvious funding sources are national (US, UK, French, etc) and international (EU and Digging into Data).
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
General Architecture for Text Engineering Summer School 2011
I had the opportunity (thanks Katie Atkinson!) to attend the General Architecture for Text Engineering Summer School 2011. The GATE people have really developed this summer school very well. It was well attended (70 participants?) and well structured (three sections and various talks). GATE attacts a good, outgoing, helpful, and diverse group of people. A whole week of GATE and never a dull moment. Geeky, but true. And text analytics seems to be a growing area (at least according to the May 2011 issue of New Scientist, which lists it as one of seven “disruptive” technologies; I’ve always wanted to be bad).
As this was my second time at the GATE summer school, I sat in on the Advanced GATE session. All the slides and all the materials for hands on exercises are available on the GATE Summer School Wiki. In my week, we covered the following:
- Module 9: Ontologies and Semantic Annotation
- Introduction to Ontologies
- GATE Ontology Editor
- GATE Ontology Annotation Tools for Entities and Relations
- Automatic Semantic Annotation in GATE
- Measuring Performance
- Using the Large Knowledge Base gazetteer (LKB)
- Module 10: Advanced GATE Applications
- Customising ANNIE
- Working with different languages
- Complex applications
- Conditional Processing
- Section-by-section processing
- Module 11: Machine Learning
- Machine learning and evaluation concepts
- Using ML in GATE
- Engines and algorithms)
- Entity learning hands-onl session
- Relation extraction hands-on session
- Module 12: Opinion Mining
- Introduction to opinion mining and sentiment analysis
- Using GATE tools to perform sentiment analysis
- Machine learning for sentiment analysis hands-on session
- Future directions for opinion mining
- Module 13: Semantic Technology and Linked Open Data: Basics, Tools, and Applications
- Linked Open Data: Introduction of key principles and some key tools (FactForge, LinkedLifeData)
- Semantic Annotation with Linked Data
- Semantic Search
By Adam Wyner
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Recent Papers
A couple of more papers which have been accepted at upcoming conferences or workshops. The papers are all downloadable from the links provided.
Arguing with Emotion
Martyn Llloyd-Kelly and Adam Wyner
UMMS July 11, Girona, Spain
The paper at the link is a draft and will be somewhat revised for distribution at the workshop.
Abstract
Emotions are commonly thought to be beyond the pale of rational analysis, for they are subjective, may vary even with respect to the person experiencing the emotion, and may conflict with rational thought. In this paper, we develop the position that emotions can be the objects of argumentation, which we express by introducing emotion terms in emotional argumentation schemes. Thus, we can argue about whether or not, according to normative standards and available evidence, it is plausible that an individual had a particular emotion. This is particularly salient in legal cases, where decisions can depend on explicit arguments about emotional states.
On the Linguistic Analysis of Argumentation Schemes
Adam Wyner
LAGB September 7-10, Manchester, United Kingdom
This is an accepted abstract of a paper which is as yet to be written.
By Adam Wyner
Distributed under the Creative Commons
Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0
Recent Papers
My colleagues and I have had the papers below accepted for upcoming conferences. The papers are all downloadable from the links provided.
Towards a Structured Online Consultation Tool
Adam Wyner, Katie Atkinson, and Trevor Bench-Capon
ePart August 2011, Deflt, The Netherlands
Abstract
The Structured Online Consultation tool (SCT) is a component tool in the IMPACT Project which is used to construct and present detailed surveys that solicit feedback from the public concerning issues in public policy. The tool is underwritten by a computational model of argumentation, incorporating fine-grained, interconnected argumentation schemes. While the public responds to easy to understand questions, the answers can be assimilated into a structured framework for analytic purposes, supporting automated reasoning about arguments and counter-arguments.
Multi-agent Based Classification Using Argumentation From Experience
Maya Wardeh, Frans Coenen, Trevor Bench-Capon, and Adam Wyner
PAKDD May 2011, Shenzhen, China
Abstract
An approach to multi-agent classification, using an Argumentation from Experience paradigm is describe, whereby individual agents argue for a given example to be classified with a particular label according to their local data. Arguments are expressed in the form of classification rules which are generated dynamically. The advocated argumentation process has been implemented in the PISA multi-agent framework, which is also described. Experiments indicate that the operation of PISA is comparable with other classification approaches and that it can be utilised for Ordinal Classification and Imbalanced Class problems.
Note: I was added to this paper to present it at the conference. I’m familiar with the argumentation aspects, but the data-mining is new to me.
Semantic Models for Policy Deliberation
Katie M. Atkinson, Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon, Dan Cartwright and Adam Z. Wyner
ICAIL June 2011, Pittsburgh, USA
Abstract
Semantic models have received little attention in recent years, much of their role having been taken over by developments in ontologies. Ontologies, however, are static, and so have only a limited role in reasoning about domains in which change matters. In this paper, we focus on the domain of policy deliberation, where policy decisions are designed to change things to realise particular social values. We explore how a particular kind of state transition system can be constructed to serve as a semantic model to support reasoning about alternative policy decisions. The policy making process includes stages that support the construction of a model, which can then be exploited in reasoning. The reasoning itself will be driven by a particular argumentation scheme for practical reasoning, and the ways in which arguments based on this scheme can be attacked and evaluated. The evaluation provides alternative policy positions. The semantics underpin a current web-based implementation, designed to solicit structured feedback on policy proposals.
Towards Formalising Argumentation about Legal Cases
Adam Z. Wyner, Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon, Katie M. Atkinson
ICAIL June 2011, Pittsburgh, USA
Abstract
In this paper we offer an account of reasoning with legal cases in terms of argumentation schemes. These schemes, and undercutting attacks associated with them, are expressed as defeasible rules of inference that will lend themselves to formalisation within the ASPIC+ framework. We begin by modelling the style of reasoning with cases developed by Aleven and Ashley in the CATO project, which describes cases using factors, and then extend the account to accommodate the dimensions used in Rissland and Ashley’s earlier HYPO project. Some additional scope for argumentation is then identified and formalised.
By Adam Wyner
Distributed under the Creative Commons
Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0