Attention eDiscovery peeps! The ACEDS Houston Chapter has a “bake-off” of Large Language Model vs LSI Models coming up soon!
The event – Large Language Model vs LSI Models: Bake-off of Artificial Flavors – will be held Thursday, October 3 from 11:30am to 1pm CT. For those in the Houston area, the event will be held at The Ion at 4201 Main St., Houston, TX 77002 and we’ll meet in Chevron’s Launchpad Suite. For those who don’t know about The Ion, it’s a revitalized iconic building that was once The Sears on Main Street! And they even validate parking for those who park in the ION District Parking Garage!
If you’re not going to be in the Houston area on that day – good news! It’s a hybrid lunch & learn, so you can still attend the “learn” part remotely (of course, you’ll have to take care of your own lunch). 😉
The “learn” part will be an educational and interactive discussion of Large Language Models vs. LSI Models.
Speakers are:
- Eric M. Robinson, JD/PMP, Vice President, Global Advisory Services & Strategic Client Solutions @ KLDiscovery
- Karan Praharaj, Machine Learning Scientist @ Reveal
They will be discussing topics including: What are Large Language Models and LSI models? What are the pros & cons? How do you apply these AI methodologies in real case scenarios? And more!
Register here to attend, either in person or remotely! If you’re in Houston, I hope to see you there!
Thanks to Trinity Legal Discovery for sponsoring the event, and to Chevron for hosting it!
So, what do you think? Are you interested in learning more about AI in eDiscovery? Of course you are! So, please register to attend the “bake-off” of LLM vs. LSI! And please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.
Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by my employer, my partners or my clients. eDiscovery Today is made available solely for educational purposes to provide general information about general eDiscovery principles and not to provide specific legal advice applicable to any particular circumstance. eDiscovery Today should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a lawyer you have retained and who has agreed to represent you.
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I would think that someone might tell us what LSI stands for. I presume they mean Latent Semantic Indexing but who knows.
If I am right, this sounds like a silly program. LSI was developed in the 1980, back when we still stopped at phone booths to make calls. That would be like having a bake off between a smart phone and a slide rule. Seems odd to me.
But at least tell people what the acronyms mean.
Thanks for pointing that out, John. I didn’t even notice that they failed to define LSI in the description of the event. I’m assuming that its Latent Semantic Indexing as well. As for it being a “silly program”, both Eric and Karan are highly knowledgeable in the field, so I still think it’s worth checking out. 🙂