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1 REGNET: Logic-Based Regulation Compliance Assistance Kincho H. Law Prof., Civil and Env. Engr. Jim Leckie Prof., Civil and Env. Engr. Barton Thompson Prof., School of Law Gio Wiederhold Prof., Computer Science Shawn Kerrigan Bill Labiosa Gloria Lau Haoyi Wang Jie Wang Civil and Env. Engr. Pooja Trivedi Li Zhang Liang Zhou (former students) Computer Science Charles Heenan Researcher, Law Student Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305
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2 Motivation The complexity, diversity, and volume of federal and state regulations: Require considerable expertise to understand Increase the risk of companies failing to comply with environmental regulations Hinder public understanding of the government How would IT help to make “applicable” regulations easily accessible? to assist parties involved in regulation compliance?
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3 Vision Current state of compliance checking: Paper-based process Locating and interpreting the relevant regulations is complex, even with the help of supplementary information Vision for future: Up-to-date regulations and compliance-checking assistance procedures available online Improved regulation and compliance-requirement transparency through clear presentation and linking Research Goal Developing information management frameworks that can facilitate public access to regulations and facilitate the compliance process.
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4 Document Repository and RAS Documents organized according to hierarchical structures Includes a variety of documents – guidelines, background information, etc. Developed a logic-based compliance assistance methodology and prototype Integrates compliance assistance with the document repository
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5 Document Repository
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6 Classification Structures (EPA List of Extremely Hazardous Substances)
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7 Classification Structures
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9 Displaying Context using Semio
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10 Research Questions How can we make the information and rules more accessible? How can we represent the information and rules in environmental regulations in a computer interpretable format? How can we structure this information to assist with regulation compliance checking?
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11 General Approach Information integration Formalization of meaning and relationships Regulation-centric Tie the information to the appropriate portion of the regulation
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12 HTML to XML Regulation Parsing XML Structured Document
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13 Translate To Hierarchical Structure PART 279—Standards For The Management Of Used Oil Subpart B – Applicability … § 279.12 Prohibitions. (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. (b) Use as a dust suppressant. The use of used oil as a dust suppressant is prohibited, except when such activity takes place in one of the states listed in § 279.82(c). (c) Burning in particular units. Off-specification used oil fuel may be burned for energy recovery in only the following devices: (1) Industrial furnaces identified in § 260.10 of this chapter; (2) Boilers, as defined in § 260.10 of this chapter, that are identified as follows: (i) Industrial boilers located on the site of a facility engaged in a manufacturing process where substances are transformed into new products, including the component parts of products, by mechanical or chemical processes; …. Subsection (a) Subsection (b) Subsection (c) 40 CFR 279 Subpart ASubpart BSubpart I Section 279.10Section 279.11Section 279.12 … …… contains … (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units … Example:
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14 Regulation Parsing § 279.12 Prohibitions. (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter.
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15 … … Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles… … … … … Abbreviated XML Representation
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16 Adding Meta-Data to Regulations Regulation tagged with meta-data Add Legal Interpretation Reference Extraction Add Logical Interpretation Add Concepts Original XML document Document Program Add Definitions
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17 What is a “Concept”? Examples: –emission requirement –leaked hazardous substance –disposal of solvents –principal hazardous constituent Why are they useful? –identify similar regulations even when they do not reference each other –provide a “context” for the regulation provision
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18 Regnet Taxonomy
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19 Tagging with Concepts Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter.
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20 Parsing References PART 279—Standards For The Management Of Used Oil Subpart B – Applicability … § 279.12 Prohibitions. (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. (b) Use as a dust suppressant. The use of used oil as a dust suppressant is prohibited, except when such activity takes place in one of the states listed in § 279.82(c). (c) Burning in particular units. Off-specification used oil fuel may be burned for energy recovery in only the following devices: (1) Industrial furnaces identified in § 260.10 of this chapter; (2) Boilers, as defined in § 260.10 of this chapter, that are identified as follows: (i) Industrial boilers located on the site of a facility engaged in a manufacturing process where substances are transformed into new products, including the component parts of products, by mechanical or chemical processes; (ii) Utility boilers used to produce electric power, steam, heated or cooled air, or other gases or fluids for sale; or (iii) Used oil-fired space heaters provided that the burner meets the provisions of § 279.23. (3) Hazardous waste incinerators subject to regulation under subpart O of parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. § 262.11 Used Oil Specification. …..
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21 (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. Before: (a) Surface impoundment prohibition. Used oil shall not be managed in surface impoundments or waste piles unless the units are subject to regulation under parts 264 or 265 of this chapter. After: Parsing References Original XML document XML with Reference List Reference Extraction
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22 Regulation Assistance System (RAS) Provides a unifying web interface for the regulation documents and meta-data Demonstrates the usefulness of XML structured regulation documents with meta- data Works with a logic-based compliance- checking assistance system to demonstrate web-based regulation services
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23 XML-based Regulations Additional Input Files Interactive User Input Regulation Compliance Decision Logic input fileFound proof / no proof found RASweb Provides web interface Displays regulation information RCCsession Implements compliance checking procedure User inputResults / requested information RAS System Structure * Otter is an automated- deduction program developed by William McCune at Argonne National Laboratory Otter * Attempts to find proof by contradiction from input file
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24 Using FOPC Target area is regulation compliance assistance tools Model regulations in a simplified form Does not handle issues of open texture, deontic modality, or subjunctive conditionals XML Embedded Logic
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25 XML Embedded Logic all _o (usedOil(_o) ForwardImplies -(dustSuppressant(_o))). Rule logic approximately models the rules specified by the regulation: 40.CFR.279.12.b – Use as a dust suppressant: “The use of used oil as a dust suppressant is prohibited…”
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26 XML Embedded Logic LogicOption elements define the user interface: Is the used oil used as a dust suppressant? (usedOil(oil1) AND dustSuppressant(oil1)). (usedOil(oil1) AND (-(dustSuppressant(oil1))).
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27 Control Statements Control statements specify processing instructions for compliance-checking
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28 XML Substitutions Standard logic syntaxXML compliant substitution -> ForwardImplies <- ReverseImplies EquivalentTo & AND | OR Logic substitutions:
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29 Processing Algorithm Depth-first tree traversal starting at a selected provision PTP Provisions to Process PTP stack maintains a list of provisions that need to be investigated APP Already Processed Provisions APP list keeps track of provisions for which processing is complete
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30 The Goto Element
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31 The End Element
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32 The SwitchTo Element
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33 Three Steps Verify regulation Interactive Q&A Compile results Determining Compliance
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34 Verify XML against DTD Verify logic rule sentences are consistent Determining Compliance Start Verify Regulation Interactive Q&A Compile Results End
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35 Determining Compliance Start Verify Regulation Interactive Q&A Compile Results End Depth-first traversal of XML regulation –Ask user questions –Follow appropriate control elements –Check for logic sentence contradictions Compile results if tree traversal is complete or logic sentence contradiction is found
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36 Check logic sentences are consistent If sentences are inconsistent, find the source of inconsistency Inconsistency implies non-compliance; assume compliance if sentences are consistent Determining Compliance Start Verify Regulation Interactive Q&A Compile Results End
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37 Use Otter to identify logic sentence contradictions Read proof output by Otter to identify logic sentences that are involved Can map logic sentences in proof back to regulation rules or user responses Processing FOPC with Otter
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38 RAS Main Page
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39 Compliance Assistance Session
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40 Results
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41 Integration with Document Repository
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42 Integration with Document Repository
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43 Results
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44 1.What regulations? 2. 3.Implement compliant procedures. Broader Perspective Information Problem How to comply?
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45 Broader Perspective
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46 Summary Can decompose regulations into a structured XML document Adding rich meta-data about regulations enables more sophisticated interaction with the documents Automated assistance with environmental compliance-checking may be possible
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47 Thank You! Questions?
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