ARCHIVED CONTENT
You are viewing ARCHIVED CONTENT released online between 1 April 2010 and 24 August 2018 or content that has been selectively archived and is no longer active. Content in this archive is NOT UPDATED, and links may not function.By Lawrence Chapin, Simon Attfield, and Efeosasere Okoro
Of all the challenges facing e-discovery practitioners, none is more daunting than that which Stuhledreher (2012) calls searching for that needle-in-the-haystack in masses of electronically stored information in all its new and evolving forms, and identifying that comparatively small set of documents that are relevant to the matter at hand, and from among those, finding the rarer documents that really matter, that truly mean something. Practitioners are asked to do all this, and do it well – effectively and efficiently.
Read the original article at: Narrative Understanding in e-Discovery