Information retrieval for E-discovery
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Information retrieval for E-discovery
(Foundations and trends in information retrieval, 7:2-3)
Now Publishers, c2013
Available at 2 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
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Note
"the essence of knowledge"--T.p.
Description and Table of Contents
Description
E-discovery refers generally to the process by which one party (for example, the plaintiff) is entitled to discover evidence in the form of electronically stored information that is held by another party (for example, the defendant), and that is relevant to some matter that is the subject of civil litigation (that is, what is commonly called a ""lawsuit"").
Information Retrieval for E-Discovery describes the emergence of the field, identifies the information retrieval issues that arise, reviews the work to date on this topic, and summarizes major open issues. This is an ideal primer for anyone with an interest in e-discovery; be it researchers who first practiced law but now study information retrieval, or those who studied information retrieval but now practice law.
Table of Contents
1: Introduction 2: The E-Discovery Process 3: Information Retrieval for E-Discovery 4: Evaluating E-Discovery 5: Experimental Evaluation 6: Looking to the Future 7: Conclusion. A. Interpreting Legal Citations. Acknowledgements. Notations and Acronyms. References.
by "Nielsen BookData"