Law360, New York ( December 1, 2015, 10:34 AM EST) -- The volume of documents routinely subject to discovery poses challenges in investigations and litigation that extend beyond e-discovery. While predictive coding is gaining increased acceptance as a procedure for identifying responsive documents with less manual review, there is less appreciation of how document analytics can add value in answering document related research questions, or otherwise helping to identify and analyze documents in ways not practical with keywords alone. Having reduced reliance on manual document review to decide which documents to produce, the challenge is to determine quickly what the documents reveal about the critical issues in the case. . . .
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Law firms are actively looking for ways to incorporate artificial intelligence into their workflow as it becomes ever more common. More than half of surveyed attorneys at U.S. law firms use generative AI for some purpose — up significantly from less than a third of attorneys who participated in the Law360 Pulse AI Survey last year.