Results 271 to 280 of about 2,148,903 (315)
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Abstract There are already some small-scale automated decision-making processes that have been introduced in the judicial arena. In addition, there are AI systems that can ‘nudge’, ‘prompt’, or ‘correct’ judges when making decisions, as well as generative forms of AI that could support judicial decision-making.
Tania Sourdin, Ella Sourdin Brown
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Tania Sourdin, Ella Sourdin Brown
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In Judges, Judging, and Judgment, Chad M. Oldfather offers an accessible, interdisciplinary account of the constraints and pressures on judges in our polarized world. Drawing on law, political science, psychology, and philosophy, Oldfather examines how these constraints have changed over time and the interpretive methodologies that have gained traction
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Risk prediction: judging the judges
Intensive Care Medicine, 1997D C, Angus, M R, Pinsky
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