Large Language Model (LLM)

Definition: A large language model is an advanced type of artificial intelligence that learns patterns in human language by studying enormous amounts of text. It uses that learning to generate new text, answer questions, and carry on conversations in a way that feels natural to people.

Example

ChatGPT and similar tools like Claude.ai are examples of large language models. They can help lawyers draft contracts, summarize legal documents, or explain complex topics, all by predicting the next most likely words based on what they have already learned.

Why It Matters?

Large language models are transforming how legal work gets done. They can save time, increase access to legal information, and improve productivity. But they can also make mistakes, invent facts, or reflect bias in their training data. Lawyers must understand how these models work so they can use them responsibly and verify their results.

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