Morgan A. Gray is an adjunct professor of law at the Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Duquesne University. The primary areas of his scholarship are criminal procedure , machine learning, natural language processing, empirical legal analysis, and legal text analytics. He also researches and develops systems to enable access to justice. His numerous published works have focused on the automatic identification of legal factors in legal documents and how predictions made by machine learning models can be interpreted and understood by users in the legal domain.
He received his B.A. from Thiel College in 2016, his J.D. from Duquesne Kline School of Law in 2019, and is currently pursuing his Ph.D. in Intelligent Systems from the University of Pittsburgh. He served as a judicial clerk for the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania for two years and is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania and the Western District of Pennsylvania.
Morgan Gray has been a guest on 1 episode.
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Episode 135: Python for Lawyers
July 8th, 2024 | 51 mins 31 secs
law school, python, teaching
In this episode of Teaching Python, Sean Tibor and Kelly Schuster-Paredes discuss the integration of Python programming into the law curriculum at Duquesne University with guests Morgan Gray and Wes Oliver. They explore how learning Python enhances law students' critical thinking, information processing, and overall effectiveness in their legal studies and careers.