Research comparing the quality of human review to predictive coding (also called technology-assisted review) has clouded the market’s understanding of the importance lawyers play in document review. This view that humans are inferior to machines, largely fueled by misunderstandings of past research, has increased the risk of inadvertent disclosures of sensitive and confidential information when responding to document requests. New research published by this webinar’s speakers in the Richmond Journal of Law & Technology challenges this conventional wisdom that machines are “better” than humans and provides legal practitioners with a citable source that may help de-risk their document reviews when using predictive coding. This EDRM session will: • Explain how the results of prior research on predictive coding has been misunderstood. • Quantify the risks associated with relying exclusively on predictive coding, without final human judgment calls. • Examine the results of experiments that use real world data to assess the quality of review when combining predictive coding with human judgment calls. Speaker Bios: Rishi P. Chhatwal is Assistant Vice President, Senior Legal Counsel at AT&T Services, Inc. Robert Keeling is a partner at Sidley Austin LLP whose practice includes a special focus on electronic discovery matters and he is co-chair of Sidley’s eDiscovery and Data Analytics Group. Peter Gronvall is a Senior Managing Director at Ankura where he leads our Global Data & Technology practice group, working with companies and their counsel on a range of service areas including data analytics, machine learning, discovery, forensics, cyber security and information risk advising. Nathaniel (Nate) Huber-Fliflet is a Senior Managing Director at Ankura, He consults with law firms and corporations on advanced data analytics solutions and legal technology services.

Hora

19:00 - 20:00 hs GMT+1

Organizador

EDRM
Compartir
Enviar a un amigo
Mi email *
Email destinatario *
Comentario *
Repite estos números *
Control de seguridad
Marzo / 2026 289 webinars
Lunes
Martes
Miércoles
Jueves
Viernes
Sábado
Domingo
Lun 23 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 24 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 25 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 26 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 27 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 28 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 01 de Marzo de 2026
Lun 02 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 03 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 04 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 05 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 06 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 07 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 08 de Marzo de 2026
Lun 09 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 10 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 11 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 12 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 13 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 14 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 15 de Marzo de 2026
Lun 16 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 17 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 18 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 19 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 20 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 21 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 22 de Marzo de 2026
Lun 23 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 24 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 25 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 26 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 27 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 28 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 29 de Marzo de 2026
Lun 30 de Marzo de 2026
Mar 31 de Marzo de 2026
Mié 01 de Marzo de 2026
Jue 02 de Marzo de 2026
Vie 03 de Marzo de 2026
Sáb 04 de Marzo de 2026
Dom 05 de Marzo de 2026

Publicidad

Lo más leído »

Publicidad

Más Secciones »

Hola Invitado