2020
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-62365-4_38
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Biased Language Detection in Court Decisions

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Recent research has found that court decisions tend to be often gender-biased, despite the expectations that the law treats everyone equally. Recent research (Pinto et al 2020) has thus focused on building a linguistic model that will be used to develop a writing assistant that will be used by legal practitioners. The tool will flag the drafted text for possible instances of gendered language and subsequently draw the attention of the writer to those instances.…”
Section: Writing Through Technologymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Recent research has found that court decisions tend to be often gender-biased, despite the expectations that the law treats everyone equally. Recent research (Pinto et al 2020) has thus focused on building a linguistic model that will be used to develop a writing assistant that will be used by legal practitioners. The tool will flag the drafted text for possible instances of gendered language and subsequently draw the attention of the writer to those instances.…”
Section: Writing Through Technologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hovy et al 2017;Axelrod et al 2019). An example of an ethical application of NLP is the deployment of tools to identify biased language in court decisions, thereby giving the courts an opportunity to rephrase those decisions (Pinto et al 2020). Another is in the detection of fake news.…”
Section: Problems To Solve Before Using Nlp Toolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From a forensic linguistics perspective, we can envision employing techniques such as rhetorical profiling (Visser et al 2021), which aims at characterizing-or profiling from a sociolinguistic point of view-speakers or authors in terms of arguing style, including their preference for certain types of argument schemes. In a similar vein, by exploring argumentation trails, one can develop refined models for detecting rhetorical strategies employed in fora such as news diffusion channels (Al-Khatib et al 2016), or prejudicial bias (Spliethöver and Wachsmuth 2020) in legal texts (Pinto et al 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pinto et al [49] proposed a project to develop a linguistic model and a tool to perform such a task over a (manually annotated) corpus of legal sentences published by the Portuguese Ministry of Justice on gender-based violence cases.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%