PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers use AI to help businesses understand Code of Federal Regs, other legal docs

Businesses that work with the federal government must comply with the Code of Federal Regulations, a binding legal document; its length and complexity cause challenges for many, so this automation process provides a way to improve understanding and access

2021-01-29
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) have made strides in automated legal document analytics (ALDA) by creating a way to machine-process the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). The CFR is a complex document containing policies related to doing business with the federal government. All business affiliates of the federal government must comply with the CFR. For government contracts to be equitably open to a broad range of businesses, policies within the CFR must be accessible.

This document automation is just one part of a broader project to help contractors and other entities manage and monitor their legal documents. Directed by Karuna Joshi, associate professor of information systems, the team has successfully managed to do a complete analysis of the CFR. Digital Government: Research and Practice recently published their methodology.

Automating document review through AI

The team's method for analyzing the CFR involves artificial intelligence (AI), which learns how to categorize information within the document, store it and extract it when it is requested. Joshi and her team achieved this by creating a knowledge graph using Semantic Web technologies to illustrate all the key terms, rules, and regulations in the document. This basic framework enables users to ask an automated tool about a specific rule and be provided with the answer.

The semantic web language OWL, or Web Ontology Language, is used to represent concepts and to contextualize relationships. According to Joshi, the framework of the knowledge graph can be "adopted by federal agencies and businesses to automate their internal processes that reference the CFR rules and policies." To facilitate this, they will make it available in the public domain.

Question and answer

General users can interact with the knowledge graph through a kind of question-and-answer process, similar to how many people use Amazon's Alexa or Apple's Siri. For example, Joshi suggests that someone could ask a policy-related question like, "How many days at a minimum must a Request for Proposal (RFP) be posted open/available?" The system would query the CFR knowledge graph to find sections in the document that answer this question.

The researchers anticipate this will be a highly useful system for any business held to the CFR thanks to how it breaks down CFR's legal complexity through the automated process with ease.

Access and accountability

This project to automate and support users' understanding of legal documents has been an ongoing effort by the UMBC team. Beyond the CFR, they seek to assist people with understanding legally binding contracts that they encounter every day, such as terms of service for major companies. Lavanya Elluri, graduate student of information systems, adds, "Our research helps the organizations that use cloud services to understand the context from these textual documents quickly."

Many users have found their data being used without their knowledge, due to the information buried within terms of service and privacy policies. Joshi predicts that the tools her team is developing to help users better understand these documents will be essential to hold companies accountable for their data use.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Americans like sports, but heterosexual men especially do

2021-01-29
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Nearly nine out of 10 Americans say they enjoy sports at least a little, but heterosexual men more commonly identify as passionate sports fans, a new study suggests. A survey of nearly 4,000 American adults found that only 11% said they did not identify as sports fans at all. Over 40% were passionate fans, identifying themselves as being "quite a bit" or "very much so" sports fans. About 60% of heterosexual men in the survey identified as passionate sports fans, compared to about 40% of both heterosexual women and lesbians. About 30% of gay men reported being passionate sports fans. "We found that U.S. adults respond overwhelmingly that they are sports fans," said Chris Knoester, co-author of the ...

Scientists look to soils to learn how forests affect air quality, climate change

Scientists look to soils to learn how forests affect air quality, climate change
2021-01-29
Trees are often heralded as the heroes of environmental mitigation. They remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, which slows the pace of climate change, and sequester nutrients such as nitrogen, which improves water and air quality. Not all tree species, however, perform these services similarly, and some of the strongest impacts that trees have on ecosystems occur below the surface, away from the eyes of observers. This complicates efforts to predict what will happen as tree species shift owing to pests, pathogens, and climate change as well as to predict which species are most beneficial in reforestation ...

Explaining to your child why behavior is wrong may not always work

2021-01-29
Parents know the scenario all too well: their child misbehaves and it comes time for discipline. Research conducted globally shows that spanking is not the best option. But verbal reasoning, which explains why the behavior is wrong, may not always have the intended positive effect if the parent is loud and abrupt, according to a new University of Michigan study. The findings indicate both positive and negative outcomes that could have lasting consequences on children's emotional development. Verbal reasoning was associated with higher levels of getting along with others, but also with increased aggression and higher levels of distraction. "Positive discipline doesn't always seem to have all that many positive benefits," ...

COVID unemployment assistance puts food on the table: BU study

2021-01-29
Another wave of COVID-19 is putting millions out of work, while tens of millions more remain unemployed, and Congress debates aid. Now, a new Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) study shows that unemployment help directly translates to people being able to put food on the table. The CARES Act--passed in March of 2020-- expanded unemployment insurance coverage, amount, and duration. Published in JAMA Network Open, the study finds that receiving unemployment insurance cuts a person's risk of food insecurity by a third, and halves the likelihood of needing to eat less because of financial constraints. And receiving more coverage, such as the weekly $600 supplement included in CARES until last July, means an even bigger reduction in the risk of going hungry. "There ...

It's elemental: Ultra-trace detector tests gold purity

Its elemental: Ultra-trace detector tests gold purity
2021-01-29
RICHLAND, Wash.?Unless radon gas is discovered in a home inspection, most people remain blissfully unaware that rocks like granite, metal ores, and some soils contain naturally occurring sources of radiation. In most cases, low levels of radiation are not a health concern. But some scientists and engineers are concerned about even trace levels of radiation, which can wreak havoc on sensitive equipment. The semiconductor industry, for instance, spends billions each year to source and "scrub" ultra-trace levels of radioactive materials from microchips, transistors and sensitive sensors. Now chemists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have developed ...

How coronavirus damages lung cells within mere hours

How coronavirus damages lung cells within mere hours
2021-01-29
What if scientists knew exactly what impact the SARS-CoV-2 virus had inside our lung cells, within the first few hours of being infected? Could they use that information to find drugs that would disrupt the virus' replication process before it ever gets fully underway? The discovery that several existing FDA-approved drugs--including some originally designed to fight cancer--can stop coronavirus in its tracks indicates the answer is a resounding yes. A team of Boston University researchers--hailing from BU's National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories ...

A potentially safer, more effective gene therapy vector for blood disorders

2021-01-29
Philadelphia, January 29, 2021--Researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have developed a gene therapy vector for blood disorders like sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia that is potentially safer and more effective than those currently used in gene therapy trials for those conditions. The vector, an engineered vehicle for delivering functional copies of the hemoglobin gene to correct a genetic abnormality, leads to the production of more hemoglobin with a lower dose, minimizing the risk of toxic side effects. The findings were published today in Molecular Therapy. "These results have many potential benefits for the successful treatment of patients ...

Black or Hispanic kids receive less medical imaging than white kids

Black or Hispanic kids receive less medical imaging than white kids
2021-01-29
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 29, 2021 - A study led by UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine shows that Black children are 18% less likely to get imaging tests as part of their emergency department visit compared to White children. Hispanic children are 13% less likely to have imaging done than Whites. The researchers suggest that this disparity results from overuse in White children, though underuse in minority children probably plays a part as well. The root cause likely stems from both patient preferences and implicit bias among providers. "Something else is going on here that's beyond the clinical, that's beyond the diagnoses," said study lead author Jennifer Marin, M.D., M.Sc., associate ...

County by county, study shows social inequality's role in COVID-19's toll

County by county, study shows social inequalitys role in COVID-19s toll
2021-01-29
In just one year, COVID-19 has killed more than 400,000 Americans, and infected more than 24 million others. But a new study shows just how unevenly those deaths and cases have played out across the country. It finds that the more disadvantaged a county's population was before the pandemic, the higher the toll of coronavirus last spring and summer. That level of disadvantage, measured on a standard scale called the Social Vulnerability Index (SVI), tracked closely with the number of cases and deaths per 100,000 residents in each county, according to the new University of Michigan study. The ten-point SVI score combines many measures of the social disadvantage of a county's population, with higher scores meaning greater disadvantage. For every ...

Assessment of maternal, neonatal cord blood SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, placental transfer ratios

2021-01-29
What The Study Did: Maternally derived antibodies are a key element of neonatal immunity. This study examined the association between maternal and neonatal SARS-CoV-2-specific antibody concentrations because understanding the dynamics of maternal antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy and subsequent transplacental antibody transfer can inform neonatal management as well as maternal vaccination strategies. Authors: Scott E. Hensley, Ph.D., of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and Karen M. Puopolo, M.D., Ph.D., of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, are the corresponding authors. To ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Can exercise help colon cancer survivors live as long as matched individuals in the general population?

Unlicensed retailers provide youths with easy access to cannabis in New York City

Scientists track evolution of pumice rafts after 2021 underwater eruption in Japan

The future of geothermal for reliable clean energy

Study shows end-of-life cancer care lacking for Medicare patients

Scented wax melts may not be as safe for indoor air as initially thought, study finds

Underwater mics and machine learning aid right whale conservation

Solving the case of the missing platinum

Glass fertilizer beads could be a sustained nutrient delivery system

Biobased lignin gels offer sustainable alternative for hair conditioning

Perovskite solar cells: Thermal stresses are the key to long-term stability

University of Houston professors named senior members of the National Academy of Inventors

Unraveling the mystery of the missing blue whale calves

UTA partnership boosts biomanufacturing in North Texas

Kennesaw State researcher earns American Heart Association award for innovative study on heart disease diagnostics

Self-imaging of structured light in new dimensions

Study highlights successes of Virginia’s oyster restoration efforts

Optimism can encourage healthy habits

Precision therapy with microbubbles

LLM-based web application scanner recognizes tasks and workflows

Pattern of compounds in blood may indicate severity of gestational hypertension and preeclampsia

How does innovation policy respond to the challenges of a changing world?

What happens when a diet targets ultra-processed foods?

University of Vaasa, Finland, conducts research on utilizing buildings as energy sources

Stealth virus: Zika virus builds tunnels to covertly infect cells of the placenta

The rising tide of sand mining: a growing threat to marine life

Contemporary patterns of end-of-life care among Medicare beneficiaries with advanced cancer

Digital screen time and nearsightedness

Postoperative weight loss after anti-obesity medications and revision risk after joint replacement

New ACS research finds low uptake of supportive care at the end-of-life for patients with advanced cancer

[Press-News.org] Researchers use AI to help businesses understand Code of Federal Regs, other legal docs
Businesses that work with the federal government must comply with the Code of Federal Regulations, a binding legal document; its length and complexity cause challenges for many, so this automation process provides a way to improve understanding and access