| Handing of significant deviations from boilerplate text |
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International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law
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Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Artificial intelligence and law
table of contents
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Pages: 145 - 154
Year of Publication: 1987
ISBN:0-89791-230-6
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Authors
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G. Morris
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Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC
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K. Taylor
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Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC
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M. Harwood
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Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 1, Downloads (12 Months): 5, Citation Count: 0
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ABSTRACT
We are attempting to extract information automatically from large legal documents. SPADES is an expert system for screening pension plans submitted to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), a task which has resisted prior automation attempts. Nearly all pension plans are prepared by plan preparation specialists. Most of a pension plan document consists of boilerplate text, which is reused by the preparer in nearly every plan. We describe techniques used for dealing with plans which essentially follow the boilerplate model for a particular preparer, but contain significant deviations.
A significant deviation is found to be any extra paragraph in a new plan which was not predicted by the boilerplate model. Other deviations from the boilerplate model can be handled fairly easily. Treatment of a significant deviation is affected by whether the topic of the extra paragraph can be identified. When it can, the logical impact of the extra text may be deduced by the system, or the system may guide an IRS Agent in analyzing the extra paragraph.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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Li, Ping-Yang, Evens, Martha, Hier, Daniel, "Generating Medical Case Reports with the Linguistic String Parser,' in Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Vol 2, 1986
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McCarty, Thorne L., Intelligent Legal Information Systems= Problems and Prospects,' in Rutgers Computer and Technology Law Journal, Volume 9, No.2, 1983, pp. 265-294.
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