Close Menu
Online 24 NewsOnline 24 News
  • Home
  • USA
  • Canada
  • UK
  • Germany
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Trending

Kentucky Wildcats News: Karl-Anthony Towns shines in NBA Finals for his late mother

June 5, 2026

The Take: The Ebola outbreak the world isn’t paying attention to

June 5, 2026

Lula says Brazil cannot ‘accept treatment’ after new US tariffs proposed

June 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Login
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Online 24 NewsOnline 24 News
Join Us Newsletter
  • Home
  • USA
  • Canada
  • UK
  • Germany
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Online 24 NewsOnline 24 News
  • USA
  • Canada
  • UK
  • Germany
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Home»Business
Business

AI Beat Law Professors At Answering Questions, Study Finds—And It Wasn’t Close

June 5, 20263 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Copy Link Email Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp

Topline

A blind study led by Stanford Law School professor Julian Nyarko published Monday found AI-generated responses outperformed those written by fellow law professors in 75% of nearly 3,000 head-to-head comparisons—a result the authors themselves called surprising.

Key Facts

When law professors were handed a stack of anonymized answers to student contract questions and asked to pick the better one, they reached for the AI’s response three times out of four.

Across 16 law schools, professors evaluated almost 3,000 anonymized matchups without knowing whether a given answer came from a machine or a colleague.

Professors flagged AI answers as pedagogically misleading or harmful just 3.5% of the time, against 12% for peer-written answers, meaning the human responses were more than three times as likely to be deemed potentially damaging to a student’s understanding.

Nyarko, who directs Stanford’s Legal Innovation through Frontier Technology Lab, said the group is “not advocating for wholesale adoption of AI tutors,” but that “our data suggests that blanket skepticism may be equally unwarranted.”

Why Was Contract Law Tested?

Contract law was chosen precisely because it resists the answer key. The 40 questions used in the study—the kind a student might raise after class or in office hours—demanded synthesis of competing arguments and a defensible conclusion rather than rote recall, testing whether a model could reason where there is no single right answer.

Key Background

The paper was authored by Nyarko with liftlab researcher Alejandro Salinas as first author, alongside colleagues from Yale, New York University, the University of Chicago and other institutions. Participants wrote their own answers before grading anyone else’s, evaluations ran blind through multiple scoring methods and the AI outputs were calibrated to match the length and structure of human responses. The team tested a range of systems, including commercial tutoring tools and Google’s NotebookLM, and found performance varied. Even where the models were hampered by limited context, evaluators frequently still favored them over their human peers. The findings land in the middle of an unresolved debate inside legal education, where some schools are racing to integrate AI while others warn of hallucinations, student overreliance and the slow erosion of the critical-thinking skills a legal education exists to build.

What To Watch For

The authors are emphatic that quality and deployment are separate questions, and they have only addressed the first. Nyarko said the conversation should now move from whether AI can produce accurate, high-quality legal answers to how it can best benefit students.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit Telegram
Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram
Copyright © 2026 YieldRadius LLP. All Rights Reserved.
  • For Advertisers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?