A computational model of facilitation in online dispute resolution
Article Ecrit par: Profitt, Brett ; Weiss, Brandy ; Howell, Sarah ; McLeod, Sarah ; Tanner, James ; Gross, Ian ; Shin, David ; Branting, Karl ;
Résumé: Online dispute resolution (ODR) is an alternative to traditional litigation that can both significantly reduce the disadvantages suffered by litigants unable to afford an attorney and greatly improve court efficiency and economy. An important aspect of many ODR systems is a facilitator, a neutral party who guides the disputants through the steps of reaching an agreement. However, insufficient availability of facilitators impedes broad adoption of ODR systems. This paper describes a novel model of facilitation that integrates two distinct but complementary knowledge sources: cognitive task analysis of facilitator behavior and corpus analysis of ODR session transcripts. This model is implemented in a decision-support system that (1) monitors cases to detect situations requiring immediate attention and (2) automates selection of standard text messages appropriate to the current state of the negotiations. This facilitation model has the potential to compensate for shortages of facilitators by improving the efficiency of experienced facilitators, assisting novice facilitators, and providing autonomous facilitation.
Langue:
Anglais
Index décimal
006.3 .Intelligence artificielle (ouvrages généraux sur l'intelligence artificielle et la science cognitive, reconnaissance de formes comme outil de l'intelligence artificielle, systèmes de questions et réponses)
Thème
Informatique
Mots clés:
Machine learning
Artificial intelligence & law
Human language technology
Online dispute resolution
Discourse analysis
Cognitive task analysis