The feature uses Casetext's legal research
assistant CARA, an analytical tool that automatically finds cases that are -LSB-...]
Fresh on the heels of Casetext's legal research
assistant CARA being named new product of the year, Casetext is today introducing an expansion of CARA that adds briefs to its suggested results.
Not exact matches
Both updates involve Casetext's artificial - intelligence, brief - analysis software
CARA (Case Analysis Research
Assistant):
As I explained when it launched last July,
CARA is an automated research
assistant that finds cases relevant to legal memoranda and briefs.
CARA — short for Case Analysis Research
Assistant — is an analytical tool that automatically finds cases that are relevant to a legal document but not cited in the document.
I can assure you that executives at Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis would take issue with Lynn's statement that only Casetext has research powered by artificial intelligence, but the AI to which she refers is
CARA, Casetext's Case Analysis Research
Assistant.
The new research tool being unveiled in a limited rollout today is called
CARA, short for Case Analysis Research
Assistant.
As I explained in a post here last summer,
CARA — short for Case Analysis Research
Assistant — is a tool that automatically finds cases that are relevant to legal memoranda and briefs.