The proprietary technology and deep knowledge behind Recommind’s Axcelerate eDiscovery differentiates it from late comers in the market. The Predictive Coding patent and additional patents pending give Recommind, its customers and its partners exclusive rights to use, host and sell systems and processes for iterative, computer-assisted document review.
Traditional eDiscovery software relies on linear review, a tedious, expensive and error-prone process in which teams of contract attorneys review hundreds of thousands of documents one at a time. With a small amount of information from a knowledgeable attorney, Predictive Coding uses machine learning to categorize and prioritize any document set faster, more accurately and more defensibly than contract attorneys, no matter how much data is involved.
By giving human reviewers computerized assistance, Predictive Coding saves 60 to 90 percent on review costs – savings that can easily reach millions of dollars per case or across several small cases.
In addition, only Recommind has the patented CORE® technology that automatically understands the latent concepts within an entire document collection. Predictive Coding’s use of this sophisticated technology provides a much more thorough and accurate review, providing the highest degree of accelerated cost and time savings in the market.
To learn more about Recommind’s CORE technology, read the whitepaper Finding Information: Intelligent Retrieval and Categorization.
How Predictive Coding Works
Axcelerate’s patented Predictive Coding process is based on Recommind’s unique probabilistic latent semantic analysis (“PLSA”) technology and includes a defensible workflow to conduct automated review and coding. Predictive Coding makes a computer-generated judgment - with explicit confidence score - about the relevance, responsiveness, and/or privileged nature of each document. This capability allows outside counsel and their clients to dramatically expedite the actual review process while concurrently improving accuracy and lowering the risk of missing key documents.








