10/07/2025
Lexitas Chief Technology Officer Discusses How AI-Enabled Litigation Solutions Give Lawyers Back More Time
Attorneys spend vast amounts of time with deposition transcripts, combing through pages of testimony to identify vital information that could shape the outcome of a case. But advances in semantic search, large language models and multi-modal analysis have given rise to new solutions to this litigation challenge.
Lexitas Chief Technology Officer Chris Fields recently discussed these innovations in a Law.com piece, “From 10,000 Pages to 10 Minutes: Accelerating Case Prep With AI-Powered Transcript and Video Analysis.” He explores how AI-driven transcript and video analysis tools are transforming litigation preparation, helping attorneys and legal teams work smarter and faster.
Fields highlights innovations such as contradiction detection, behavioral video analysis, and multi-deposition pattern recognition, which together enable litigators to find key insights in minutes instead of days. As he notes, these advances are not just about efficiency, they’re about giving legal teams the clarity and confidence they need to focus on what matters most: strategy, advocacy, and delivering results for clients.
Read the full article on Law.com.
Lexitas Chief Technology Officer Chris Fields recently discussed these innovations in a Law.com piece, “From 10,000 Pages to 10 Minutes: Accelerating Case Prep With AI-Powered Transcript and Video Analysis.” He explores how AI-driven transcript and video analysis tools are transforming litigation preparation, helping attorneys and legal teams work smarter and faster.
Fields highlights innovations such as contradiction detection, behavioral video analysis, and multi-deposition pattern recognition, which together enable litigators to find key insights in minutes instead of days. As he notes, these advances are not just about efficiency, they’re about giving legal teams the clarity and confidence they need to focus on what matters most: strategy, advocacy, and delivering results for clients.
Read the full article on Law.com.