Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People hoped AI could give legal advice, but it hasn’t worked because law needs human interpretation. Early systems treated law as fixed rules to apply to facts, which breaks down when terms are vague or situations are unclear (e.g., is a mobile home a house or a vehicle). Newer systems compare past cases, but they use similarity tests set by designers, so they still can’t figure out on their own what makes cases truly alike.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the paragraph about case-based reasoners and their stated limitation: the passage says similarity criteria 'are system dependent and fixed by the designer' and that 'this simply postpones the apparently intractable problem of developing a system that can discover for itself the factors that make cases similar in relevant ways.' Use those sentences to test whether adding fixed criteria would solve the systems' key shortcoming.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage26.Based on the passage, which one of the following can be most reasonably inferred concerning case-based reasoners?
Correct Answer
C
The passage states that in current case-based systems 'the criteria for similarity among cases are system dependent and fixed by the designer, so that similarity is found only by testing for the presence or absence of predefined factors.' It then says, 'This simply postpones the apparently intractable problem of developing a system that can discover for itself the factors that make cases similar in relevant ways.' Therefore it is reasonable to infer that adding specific (designer-fixed) criteria would not overcome the important shortcoming that the systems cannot autonomously discover relevant similarity factors.
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