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Laima Paliulionienė

Abstract

The article presents an overview of the history and present state in artificial intelligence and law investigations. It discusses what features of legal knowledge determine specific features of computer knowledge-based legal systems and what problems these systems work on. Computer modelling methods and their use for the modelling of legal reasoning are considered as well. Knowledge-based legal systems usually use hybrid methods that integrate several methods. The main methods are deduction, induction and analogy. Deduction is usually used to model legal norms and heuristics. It is the main method in the countries with statute law traditions, and Lithuania is one of such countries. Induction is used to generalize concrete cases and obtain deductive rules. Analogy is used to make a decision on the ground of previous decisions made in similar cases. Induction and analogy are applied in case-based reasoning. The article also overviews some other methods used to model legal reasoning: argumentation, deontic logic, hypertext, neural networks. Issues of computer modelling in legal drafting are discussed separately.

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Section
Articles