***********************************************************************Information Retrieval from Legal Documents (IRLeD) 2017
In conjunction with FIRE 2017
Forum for Information Retrieval Evaluation
Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
8th - 10th December
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Track description:
In
a Common Law System, great importance is given to prior cases. A prior
case (also called a precedent) is an older court case related to the
current case, which discusses similar issue(s) and which can be used as
reference in the current case. A prior case is treated as important as
any law written in the law book (called statutes). This is to ensure
that a similar situation is treated similarly in every case. If an
ongoing case has any related/relevant legal issue(s) that has already
been decided, then the court is expected to follow the interpretations
made in the prior case. For this purpose, it is critical for legal
practitioners to find and study previous court cases, so as to examine
how the ongoing issues were interpreted in the older cases.
With
the recent developments in information technology, the number of
digitally available legal documents has rapidly increased. It is, hence,
imperative for legal practitioners to have an automatic precedent
retrieval system. The task of precedence retrieval can be modeled as a
task of information retrieval, where the current document (or a
description of the current situation) will be used as the query, and the
system should return relevant prior cases as results.
Generally,
legal texts (e.g., court case descriptions) are long and have complex
structures. This makes their thorough reading time-consuming and
strenuous. So, apart from a precedence retrieval system, it is also
essential for legal practitioners to have a concise representation of
the core legal issues described in a legal text. One way to list the
core legal issues is by keywords or key phrases, which are known as
“catchphrases” in the legal domain.
Motivated by the requirements described above, we have the following two tasks:
* Catchphrase extraction
* Precedence retrieval
Task 1:
Catchphrases
are short phrases from within the text of the document. Catchphrases
can be extracted by selecting certain portions from the text of the
document. A set of legal documents (Indian Supreme Court decisions) will
be provided. For a few of these documents (training set), the
catchphrases (gold standard) will also be provided. These catchphrases
have been obtained from a well-known legal search system Manupatra (www.manupatra.co.in),
which employs legal experts to annotate case documents with
catchphrases. The rest of the documents will be used as the test set.
The participants will be expected to extract the catchphrases for the
documents in the test set.
Task 2:
For the precedent retrieval task, two sets of documents shall be provided:
Current cases: A set of cases for which the prior cases have to be retrieved.
Prior
cases: For each “current case”, we have obtained a set of prior cases
that were actually cited in the case decision. These cited prior cases
are present in the second set of documents along with other (not cited)
documents.
For
each document in the first set, the participants are to form a list of
documents from the second set in a way that the cited prior cases are
ranked higher than the other (not cited) documents.
A participant team may participate in either or both the sub-tasks. Each team can have at most 4 participants.
Evaluation plan:
For
Task 1, a set of catchphrases is expected as result for each document
in the test data. We plan to use set-based IR measures such as
Precision, Recall, F-Score, etc., to check how well the set of extracted
catchphrases match with the set of gold standard catchphrases.
For
Task 2, a ranked list of documents is expected as result for each
document in the Current Cases set. Measures like Precision, Recall, MAP,
DCG and Mean Reciprocal Rank will be used to check how well the
documents that were actually cited are ranked in the retrieved list of
documents.
Timeline:
July 24 – data released
September 20 – run submission deadline
October 10 – results declared
October 30 – working notes due
Contact:
Regards
Arindam Pal
Research Scientist
TCS Research
http://www.cse.iitd.ac.in/~arindamp/