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Introduction to Online Legal Research  (Westlaw and Lexis)
Professor Callister




Session: Fall - Spring
Working with databases with tables of contents.Using clip and alert services to stay current.Keeping track of your searches.Practice problems for the Fall Session of Westlaw and Lexis instruction.
Segment and restricted field searching.Natural language search on both Lexis and Westlaw.How to find similar documents using Lexis "More Like This" searching.How to searcher for similar cases using West Key Numbers.How to check status with Shepards and KeyCite.

Westlaw:  Natural Language Searches

 
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Both Lexis and Westlaw have "Natural Language" searching capability.  Natural language works by an algorithm which weighs terms according to their rareness--the rarer the term, the higher the score.  Documents are searched and scored using this mechanism.  Additional weight is given if the document contains search terms that are proximate to each other.  The default search output is not by date (which is the default for "terms and connector" searches") but by relevance score. 

Natural language searching contrasts with terms and connectors searching in that in the latter, the search terms all have equal rate and must be present (or not present) as dictated by the search string.

Here's how natural language works . . .

Select Natural Language

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