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      <title-group>
        <article-title>Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Semantic Analysis of Information in Legal Texts Automated</article-title>
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      <contrib-group>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>Proceedings volume compiled by: Matthias Grabmair Language Technologies Institute Carnegie Mellon University 5000</institution>
          <addr-line>Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15213</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="US">USA</country>
        </aff>
        <aff id="aff1">
          <label>1</label>
          <institution>Session 1: Capturing Legal Discourse ○ Vern R. Walker</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>Krishnan Pillaipakkamnatt, Alexandra M. Davidson, Marysa Linares, Domenick J. Pesce</addr-line>
        </aff>
        <aff id="aff2">
          <label>2</label>
          <institution>The ASAIL 2019 Organizing Committee Kevin D. Ashley, University of Pittsburgh, USA Katie Atkinson, University of Liverpool, UK Karl Branting, MITRE Corporation, USA Enrico Francesconi, Italian National Research Council (ITTIG-CNR), Publications Office of the European Union Matthias Grabmair, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Vern R. Walker, Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University, USA Bernhard Waltl, BMW Group AG Adam Zachary Wyner, University of Aberdeen</institution>
          ,
          <country country="UK">UK</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <abstract>
        <p>The Third Workshop on Automated Semantic Analysis of Information in Legal Texts (ASAIL 2019) will be held on June 21, 2019, at the Université de Montréal, co-located with the 17th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL 2019). The purpose of the workshop is to provide a dedicated venue for legal NLP related work for which there has been an increasing number of main ICAIL conference submissions. The workshop received 15 submissions and one referred submission from another ICAIL workshop, resulting in a total of 16 submissions, one of which did not conform to the submission guidelines. The 15 eligible papers were peer reviewed and 13 were accepted for presentation. Of these, one was withdrawn to be presented at a different ICAIL workshop. The final workshop program hence consists of 12 presentations (7 long, 5 short) in the following sessions whose papers are contained in this proceedings volume.</p>
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      <p>ASAIL 2019
●</p>
      <p>Session 5: Unsupervised Methods on Legal Data
○ Linyuan Tang, Kyo Kageura, ​An Examination of the Validity of General Word Embedding</p>
      <p>Models for Processing Japanese Legal Texts
○ Łukasz Górski, ​Towards legal change analysis: clustering of Polish Civil Code amendments
Session 6: Machine Learning Method Challenges on Legal Data</p>
      <p>○ Venkata Nagaraju Buddarapu, Arunprasath Shankar, ​Data Shift in Legal AI Systems
In order to make as much time available for paper presentations as possible, the committee decided not to
invite a speaker for the workshop event.</p>
      <p>The organizing committee expresses its sincere gratitude to all authors for their submissions and participation
in the workshop, to the program committee for its diligent reviewing, and to the workshop attendees.
June 2019
These proceedings are published online by the ASAIL organizing committee as
CEUR Workshop Proceedings
http://ceur-ws.org
Copyright © 2019 for the individual papers by the papers' authors.</p>
      <p>Copying permitted for private and academic purposes.</p>
      <p>This volume is published and copyrighted by its editors.</p>
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