This paper addresses the problems that lawyers experience retrieving information from legal-text databases. Traditional access mechanisms of text databases require users to know how information is stored. We propose a method for index organisation which shields lawyers from the internal storage structures and which allows them to address the legal databases in their own legal terms. The proposed index is based on a model of legal tasks as opposed to traditional database indexes which represent the contents of the database. We will lay out the architecture of an information system in which this task model is used to determine the information need, to retrieve relevant documents and to give methodical guidance for the legal task itself. To ac...
Knowledge management in the legal domain has become a challenging issue for e-government-based appli...
This paper reports on a study examining attorneys and law librarians use of their memory and informa...
In this paper, we explain how legal search is different from other search scenarios and why it shoul...
A well-designed database supports legal thinking by bringing together the request for infor-mation a...
Abstract. A large interest has been dedicated in recent years to the study of models for textual dat...
In the last years, the legal domain has been revolutionized by the use of Information and Communicat...
Abstract: This paper discusses the need for an integrated electronic database for law, and.examines ...
Abstract. Legal text retrieval traditionally relies upon external knowledge sources such as thesauri...
This paper presents work in progress to design and test a new model for indexing judicial decisions...
International audienceThis paper highlights the benefit of semantic information retrieval in legal n...
Luuk Matthijssen, who studied business informatics, worked at the law faculty of Tilburg University ...
This paper reports (1) on the results of a user study and (2) search-history-based user interface to...
Lawyers often need to look for previous similar legal cases when analysing new ones. The more previo...
Information search and retrieval are part of daily routines of the legal profession. Lawyers, judges...
. Traditional information retrieval systems do not satisfy the lawyers' demands because they pr...
Knowledge management in the legal domain has become a challenging issue for e-government-based appli...
This paper reports on a study examining attorneys and law librarians use of their memory and informa...
In this paper, we explain how legal search is different from other search scenarios and why it shoul...
A well-designed database supports legal thinking by bringing together the request for infor-mation a...
Abstract. A large interest has been dedicated in recent years to the study of models for textual dat...
In the last years, the legal domain has been revolutionized by the use of Information and Communicat...
Abstract: This paper discusses the need for an integrated electronic database for law, and.examines ...
Abstract. Legal text retrieval traditionally relies upon external knowledge sources such as thesauri...
This paper presents work in progress to design and test a new model for indexing judicial decisions...
International audienceThis paper highlights the benefit of semantic information retrieval in legal n...
Luuk Matthijssen, who studied business informatics, worked at the law faculty of Tilburg University ...
This paper reports (1) on the results of a user study and (2) search-history-based user interface to...
Lawyers often need to look for previous similar legal cases when analysing new ones. The more previo...
Information search and retrieval are part of daily routines of the legal profession. Lawyers, judges...
. Traditional information retrieval systems do not satisfy the lawyers' demands because they pr...
Knowledge management in the legal domain has become a challenging issue for e-government-based appli...
This paper reports on a study examining attorneys and law librarians use of their memory and informa...
In this paper, we explain how legal search is different from other search scenarios and why it shoul...