Arrow Research search
Back to AAAI

AAAI 1994

DANIEL: Integrating Case-Based and Rule-Based Reasoning in Law

Short Paper Student Abstracts Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

This paper introduces DANlEL, an architecture for the integration of case-based reasoning and rule-based reasoning for legal interpretation. Rather than interleaving the reasoners and assuming their complementarity, like in previous approaches, they are applied concurrently. Conflicting interpretations are handled explicitly, based on domain knowledge and on the notion of redundancy. The principal problems of legal interpretation are the lack of deep models for legal reasoning, the existence of inherently ill-defined predicates and the frequent use of open-textured concepts, as pointed out in (Rissland and Skalak 1991). A hybrid approach to representing the legal sources and the use of meta-knowledge seems to be appropriate to solve these problems. The scope of DANIEL is not limited to this particular domain, since the noted difficulties do not occur exclusively, but prototypically in the law.

Authors

Keywords

No keywords are indexed for this paper.

Context

Venue
AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Archive span
1980-2026
Indexed papers
28718
Paper id
519624751053445979