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xaila:start [2019/03/23 17:27] – [List of members of the program committee] gjnxaila:start [2020/12/08 14:48] – [Invited Speakers] gjn
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-====== The EXplainable AI in Law (XAILA) Workshop ======+====== The EXplainable & Responsible AI in Law (XAILA) Workshop ======
  
-**XAILA webpage [[http://xaila.geist.re]]**+**The main XAILA webpage is [[http://xaila.geist.re]]**
  
-**The second edition of XAILA** will be held on the [[https://icail2019-cyberjustice.com|International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL)]]June 17-21, 2019, Montréal (Qc.), Canada+XAILA is an interdisciplinary workshop on the intersection of AI and Law, focusing on the important issues of EXplainable and Responsible AI.
  
-**Organized by:** Grzegorz J. Nalepa, Martin Atzmueller, Michał Araszkiewicz, Paulo Novais+In 2020 we are having the 3rd edition of XAILA, organized by Grzegorz J. Nalepa, Michał Araszkiewicz, Bart Verheij, and Martin Atzmueller  
 +(Jagiellonian University, Poland; University of Groningen, The Netherlands; University of Osnabrueck, Germany) at the //[[https://jurix2020.law.muni.cz|JURIX 2020]]//.  
 +JURIX 2020 is the 33rd International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems organised by the Foundation for Legal Knowledge Based Systems (JURIX) since 1988. JURIX 2020 is co-hosted by the Institue of Law and Technology (Faculty of Law, Masaryk University, Brno) and the Knowledge-based Software Systems Group (Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University, Prague).
  
-[[start2018|The first edition, XAILA2018]] was  +See more information on the [[start#past editions of XAILA]].
-**Organized by:** Grzegorz JNalepa, Martin Atzmueller, Michał Araszkiewicz, Paulo Novais\\ +
-at the [[http://jurix2018.ai.rug.nl/|31st international conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems]] December 12–14, 2018 in Groningen, The Netherlands +
-[[start2018|See the dedicated page for XAILA2018]]+
  
-===== XAILA2019@ICAIL =====+===== XAILA 2020 at JURIX2020 ===== 
 +==== Workshop Program ==== 
 +The workshop will take place on 09.12.2020 online using MSTeams. 
 +More details will follow.
  
-The 2nd EXplainable AI in Law Workshop (XAILA2019@ICAIL) +9:15-9:30 Workshop Opening by the XAILA2020 Chairs (Grzegorz JNalepaMichał AraszkiewiczMartin Atzmueller, Bart Verheij)
-at the  +
-[[https://icail2019-cyberjustice.com|17th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL2019)]] +
-June 17-212019Montréal (Qc.), Canada +
  
 +Session 1
  
-OrganizersGrzegorz J. NalepaMartin AtzmuellerMichał AraszkiewiczPaulo Novais+9:30-10:00 
 +Barbara GallinaGörkem PacaciDavid Johnson, Steve McKeever, Andreas Hamfelt, Stefania Costantini, Pierangelo Dell'Acqua and Gloria-Cerasela Crisan: Towards ExplainableCompliant and Adaptive Human-Automation Interaction
  
-==== Workshop and description ====+10:00-10:30 
 +Youssef Ennali and Tom van Engers: 
 +Data-driven AI development: an integrated and iterative bias mitigation approach
  
-Humanized AI (HAI) includes important perspectives in AI systems, including transparency and explainability (XAI). The idea of XAI has recently emerged as one of the most debated topics not only in the scientific community, but also in the general public. The design and use of AI algorithms raises important engineering, societal, ethical and legal challenges. In particular, AI-enhanced tools are used in commercial settings (advertisement, e-marketing), civil and labour law relations (such as employee assessment and recruitment processes), financial markets, penitentiary systems as well as in medical diagnosis etc. The decisions taken with the support of or directly based on the results generated by AI have more and more impact on the life of societies of individuals. Machine Learning tools are also intensively developed with an intention of application in the field of legal services provision and legal decision-making process. Understandability of the operations of these algorithms, as well as the provisioning of explanations with regard to the decision making process in the AI systems is of profound importance. Furthermore, only these features can lay foundations for the proper discussion of the ethical aspects of AI systems. The workshop’s idea is to discuss the current state of the art with respect to these broad yet important multidisciplinary challenges as well as the prospects for the future.+10:30-11:00 coffee break
  
-==== Topics ====+Session 2 
 + 
 +11:00-12:00 INVITED TALK Philipp Hacker - AI and Discrimination: Legal Challenges and Technical Strategies 
 + 
 +12:00-12:30 
 +Heng Zheng, Davide Grossi and Bart Verheij: 
 +Precedent Comparison in the Precedent Model Formalism: Theory and Application to Legal Cases 
 + 
 +12:30-13:00 
 +Bernardo Alkmim, Edward Hermann Haeusler and Daniel Schwabe: 
 +Reasoning over Knowledge Graphs in an Intuitionistic Description Logic 
 + 
 +13:00-14:00 lunch break 
 + 
 +Session 3 
 + 
 +14:00-15:00 INVITED TALK Reinoud Baker - Legal information systems in production 
 + 
 +15:00-15:30 
 +Annemarie Borg and Floris Bex: 
 +Explaining Arguments at the Dutch National Police 
 + 
 +15:30-16:00 coffee break 
 + 
 +Session 4 and Roundtable discussion 
 + 
 +16:00-16:30 
 +Łukasz Górski, Shashishekar Ramakrishna and Jędrzej M. Nowosielski: Towards Grad-CAM Based Explainability in a Legal Text Processing Pipeline 
 + 
 +16:30-17:00 
 +Giovanni Sileno, Alexander Boer, Geoff Gordon and Bernhard Reader: Like Circles in the Water: Responsibility as a System-Level Function 
 + 
 +17:00-17:30 
 +Karl Branting: Explanation in Hybrid, Two-Stage Models of Legal Prediction 
 + 
 +17:30-18:15 Roundtable discussion and closing  
 + 
 +==== Invited Speakers ==== 
 + 
 +{{:xaila:p_hacker.jpg?100 |}} 
 +**Professor Dr. Philipp Hacker**, LL.M. (Yale), holds the Chair for Law and Ethics of the Digital Society at European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder). He serves jointly at the Faculty of Law and at the European New School of Digital Studies (ENS). Before joining Viadrina, he was an AXA Postdoctoral Fellow at the Faculty of Law at Humboldt University of Berlin. Previous research stays include a Max Weber Fellowship at the European University Institute and an A.SK Fellowship at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center. His research focuses on law and technology as well as (behavioral) law and economics. In 2020, he received the Science Award of the German Foundation for Law and Computer Science. His most recent books include Regulating Blockchain. Techno-Social and Legal Challenges (Oxford University Press, 2019, co-edited with Ioannis Lianos, Georgios Dimitropoulos and Stefan Eich); Theories of Choice. The Social Science and the Law of Decision Making (Oxford University Press, forthcoming, co-edited with Stefan Grundmann); and Datenprivatrecht [Private Data Law] (Mohr Siebeck, 2020). 
 + 
 +**Title of the talk** AI and Discrimination: Legal Challenges and Technical Strategies 
 + 
 +**Abstract** 
 +The talk will focus on the interaction between AI models and liability in the domain of non-discrimination. As is well-known, the output of AI models may exhibit bias toward legally protected groups. In the past, various fairness definitions have been developed to mitigate such discrimination. Against this background, the talk will first present a new model which allows AI developers to flexibly interpolate between different fairness definitions depending on the context of the model application. In the second step, however, the talk will inquire to what extent AI developers may risk liability under affirmative action doctrines if they seek to implement algorithmic fairness measures in their models. 
 + 
 +{{:xaila:baker.jpg?100 |}} 
 +**Reinoud Baker** 
 + 
 +**Title** Legal information systems in production 
 + 
 +**Abstract** 
 +LexIQ is a Dutch legal tech startup using data science for legal information services. We have the vision that legal tech can serve citizens, governments and businesses, for instance by improved access to justice, efficient use of resources and enhanced compliance. This talk will address what we have learned in the past 4 years. What can be achieved with modern software and algorithms? How can we make innovative technologies available for legal professionals and even the wider public? Which challenges are we encountering? 
 + 
 + 
 +==== Call for Papers ==== 
 +{{ :xaila:xaila2020cfp1.pdf |}} 
 + 
 +==== Motivation for the workshop ==== 
 + 
 +In the last several years we have observed a growing interest in advanced AI systems achieving impressive task performance. However, there has also been an increased awareness of their complexity and challenging consequences of their possibly limited understandability to humans. In response, a number of research directions have been initiated. These include humanized or human-centered AI, as well as ethically aligned, ethically designed, or just ethical AI. In many of these ideas, the principal concept seems to be the explanatory capability of the AI system (XAI), e.g. via interpretable and explainable machine learning, inclusion of human background knowledge and adequate declarative knowledge, that could provide foundations not only for transparency and understandability, but also for a possible value alignment and human centricity, as the explanation is to be provided to humans. 
 + 
 +Recently, the term responsible AI (RAI) has been coined as a step beyond XAI. Discussion of RAI has been again strongly influenced by the “ethical” perspective. However, as practitioners in our fields we are convinced, that the advancements of AI are way too fast, and the ethical perspective much too vague to offer conclusive and constructive results. We are convinced, that the concepts of responsibility, and accountability should be considered primarily from the legal perspective, also because the operation of AI-based systems poses actual challenges to rights and freedoms of individuals. In the field of law, these concepts should obtain some well-defined interpretation, and reasoning procedures based on them should be clarified. The introduction of AI systems into the public, as well as the legal domain brings many challenges that have to be addressed. The catalogue of these problems include, but is not limited to: (1) the type of liability adequate for the operation of AI (be it civil, administrative of criminal liability); (2) the (re)interpretation of classical legal concepts concerning the ascription of liability, such as causal link, fault or foreseeability and (3) the distribution of liability among the involved actors (AI developers, vendors, operators, customers etc.). As the notions relevant for the discussion of legal liability evolved on the basis of observation and evaluation of human behavior, they are not easily transferable to the new and disputable domain of liability related to the operation of artificial intelligent systems. The goal of the workshop is to cover and integrate these problems and questions, bridging XAI and RAI by integrating methodological AI, as well as the respective ethical and legal perspectives, also specifically with support of established concepts and methods regarding responsibility, and accountability. 
 + 
 +==== Topics of interest ==== 
 + 
 +Our objective is to bring people from AI interested in XAI and RAI topics  and create an ample space for discussion with people from the field of legal scholarship and/or legal practice, and most importantly the vibrant AI&Law community. As many members of the AI and Law community join both perspectives, the JURIX conference is the perfect venue for the workshop. Together we would like to address some questions like:
  
-The scope of the XAILA workshop encompasses a broad array of topics including, but not limited to: 
   * the notions of transparency, interpretability and explainability in XAI   * the notions of transparency, interpretability and explainability in XAI
-  * non-functional design choices for explainable and transparent AI systems (including legal requirements)+  * non-functional design choices for explainable and transparent AI systems
   * legal consequences of black-box AI systems   * legal consequences of black-box AI systems
-  * legal criteria for explainable and transparent AI systems+  * legal criteria and requirements for explainabletransparent, and responsible AI systems 
 +  * criteria of legal responsibility discussed in the context of intelligent systems operation and the role of explainability in liability ascription
   * possible applications of XAI systems in the area of legal policy deliberation, legal practice, teaching and research   * possible applications of XAI systems in the area of legal policy deliberation, legal practice, teaching and research
-  * ethical and legal implications of the use of AI systems in different spheres of societal life+  * legal implications of the use of AI systems in different spheres of societal life
   * the notion of right to explanation   * the notion of right to explanation
-  * relation of XAI and argumentation technologies +  *  relation of XAI and RAI to argumentation technologies 
-  * XAI models and architectures+  * approaches and architectures for XAI and RAI in AI systems 
 +  * XAI, RAI and declarative domain knowledge
   * risk-based approach to analysis of AI systems and the influence of XAI on risk assessment   * risk-based approach to analysis of AI systems and the influence of XAI on risk assessment
-  * incorporating ethical values into AI systems and the legal interpretation and consequences of this process +  * incorporation of ethical values into AI systems, its legal interpretation and consequences 
-  * XAI, privacy and data protection +  * XAI, privacy and data protection (conceptual and theoretical issues)
-  * possible legal aspects and consequences of affective systems+
   * XAI, certification and compliance   * XAI, certification and compliance
  
-==== The intended audience ==== +==== Workshop format ==== 
-The workshop is of particular interest for the members of AI and Law community. Howeverit may also be found relevant by sociologists, lawyers (e.g. judges), data protection officers, business people, policymakers, legislators, public officers, NGO and last but certainly not least engineers.  Our objective is to bring people from AI interested in XAI/HAI topics and create an ample space for discussion with people from the field of legal scholarship and/or legal practice.+Workshop format: paper presentations + panel discussioninvited talk/s.
  
-==== List of members of the program committee ====  +Intended audience are practitioners and theorists from both law and AI. 
-//tentative//+
  
-Martin Atzmueller, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\+==== Program Committee ==== 
 + 
 +List of members of the program committee (to be confirmed):\\ 
 +Martin Atzmueller, Osnabrueck University, Germany\\
 Michal Araszkiewicz, Jagiellonian University, Poland\\ Michal Araszkiewicz, Jagiellonian University, Poland\\
 Kevin Ashley, University of Pittsburgh, USA\\ Kevin Ashley, University of Pittsburgh, USA\\
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 David Camacho, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain\\ David Camacho, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain\\
 Pompeu Casanovas, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain\\ Pompeu Casanovas, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain\\
-Colette Cuijpers, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\ 
-Rafał Michalczak, Jagiellonian University, Poland\\ 
 Teresa Moreira, University of Minho Braga, Portugal\\ Teresa Moreira, University of Minho Braga, Portugal\\
 Paulo Novais, University of Minho Braga, Portugal\\ Paulo Novais, University of Minho Braga, Portugal\\
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 Martijn von Otterlo, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\ Martijn von Otterlo, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\
 Adrian Paschke, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany\\ Adrian Paschke, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany\\
-Jose Palma, Univesidad de Murcia, Spain\\ 
 Monica Palmirani, Università di Bologna, Italy\\ Monica Palmirani, Università di Bologna, Italy\\
 Radim Polčák, Masaryk University, Czech Republic\\ Radim Polčák, Masaryk University, Czech Republic\\
 Marie Postma, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\ Marie Postma, Tilburg University, The Netherlands\\
-Juan Pavón, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain\\ 
 Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics, Japan\\ Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics, Japan\\
 +Jaromír Šavelka, Carnegie Mellon University, USA\\
 Erich Schweighofer, University of Vienna, Austria\\ Erich Schweighofer, University of Vienna, Austria\\
-Piotr Skrzypczyński, Poznań University of Technology, Poland\\ +Michal Valco, Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra, Slovakia\\ 
-Dominik Ślęzak, Warsaw University, Poland\\ +Tomasz Żurek, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University of Lublin, Poland\\
-Michal Valco, University of Presov, Slovakia\\ +
-Tomasz Żurek, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University of Lublin, Poland+
  
 ==== Important dates ==== ==== Important dates ====
  
-Submission: 26.04.2019\\ +Submission: //09.11.2020// <del>04.11.2020</del> <del>26.10.2020</del>\\ 
-Notification:  10.05.2019\\ +Notification:  23.11.2020\\ 
-Camera-ready: 31.05.2019\\ +Camera-ready: 30.11.2020\\ 
-Workshop:  17.06.2019+Workshop:  09.12.2020\\ 
 + 
 +==== Submission details ==== 
 + 
 +We accept regular/long papers up to 12pp. 
 +We also welcome short and position papers of 6pp. 
 +Please use the [[https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines|Springer LNCS format]]. 
 + 
 +A dedicated Easychair installation is provided at [[https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=xaila2020]] 
 + 
 +Workshop proceedings will be made available by CEUR-WS. A post workshop journal publication is considered. 
 + 
 +===== Past editions of XAILA ===== 
 +  
 +[[start2018|The first edition, XAILA2018]] was  
 +Organized by: Grzegorz J. Nalepa, Martin Atzmueller, Michał Araszkiewicz, Paulo Novais\\ 
 +at the [[http://jurix2018.ai.rug.nl/|31st international conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems]] December 12–14, 2018 in Groningen, The Netherlands 
 +[[start2018|See the dedicated page for XAILA2018]] 
 + 
 +XAILA 2018 proceedings can be found at [[http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2381]]
  
-==== Submission and proceedings ====  +We also proposed XAILA to be held on the [[https://icail2019-cyberjustice.com|International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL)]], June 17-21, 2019, Montréal (Qc.), Canada. While the workshop was met with a large interest, and attracted many registered participants, surprisingly too few papers were actually submitted.  
-Please submit using the dedicated Easychair installation  +[[icail2019|See the dedicated page for XAILA2019@ICAIL]]
-[[https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=xaila2019icail]]+
  
-We accept long (8 pages) and short/position (4 pages) papers in PDF only.  +[[start2019|The second edition of XAILA, XAILA2019]] was Organized by: Grzegorz JNalepa, Martin Atzmueller, Michał Araszkiewicz, Paulo Novais\\ 
-Please use the ACM format: [[https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template]]+at the [[https://jurix2019.oeg-upm.net/|JURIX 2019 32nd International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems]] on the  
 +December 11, 2019, Madrid, Spain in ETSI Minas y Energía School (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid) 
 +[[start2019|See the dedicated page for XAILA2019]]
  
-Workshop proceedings will be made available by CEUR-WS.  +XAILA 2019 proceedings can be found at [[http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2681]]
-A post workshop journal publication is considered.+
  
xaila/start.txt · Last modified: 2021/11/27 17:39 by gjn
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