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Paper on Classifying Semantic Types of Legal Sentences - Portability of Machine Learning Models has been accepted at Jurix 2018

The team of Florian Matthes, consisting of Ingo Glaser, and Elena Scepankova, has published their recent results on Classifying Semantic Types of Legal Sentences: Portability of Machine Learning Models at the 31st international conference on legal knowledge and information systems (Jurix). The paper is going to be presented at the conference from 12-14 December 2018, Netherlands, Groningen.

More details can be found here.

 


Paper on Law Analysis published

A paper has been accepted for publication at the International Symposium for Legal Informatic. In the paper entitled "Comparison of Law Texts: An Analysis of German and Austrian Legislation regarding Linguistic and Structural Metrics", the author team (Bernhard Waltl and Florian Matthes) discusses the analysis of legal texts regarding to linguistic metrics. Thereby, they extended an existing set of complexity indicators regarding linguistic and structural properties and applied them to Austrian and German laws. Based on the results that were generated, it is possible to formally compare laws and determine inter-subjective insights. See [Wa15a]


Paper on Complexity of Legal Text published

A paper has been accepted for publication at the 27th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems. In the paper entitled "Towards Measures of Complexity: Applying Structural and Linguistic Metrics to German Laws", the author team (Bernhard Waltl and Florian Matthes) discusses the complexity of legal texts regarding to linguistic metrics. Thereby, they present the result of the analysis of about 3553 German law texts by applying structural and lexical metrics to them. They calculated several structural and lexical indicators for complexity and determined highly significant correlations (p <= 0.01). The papers' contribution is a set of metrics, enabling a structured and objective comparison of legal texts regarding their complexity. See [Wa14c]


Paper on IT Audits and Compliance accepted

A paper has been accepted for publication at the European Institute for Computer Anti-Virus Research (EICAR): Trust and Transparency in IT Security. In the paper entitled "Deriving and Modelling Compliance Requirements from Legal Audits ", the author team (Bernhard Waltl, Alexander W. Schneider and Florian Matthes) discusses the derivation of compliance requirements from legal audits. Thereby, they present a method to derive concrete requirements using a combination of emprical and analytical study. Furthermore, the paper addresses the impact of legal obligations in risk management of IT systems regarding to Basel II and how those can be added to enterprise models using a common modeling language, namely ArchiMate.