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Lost in Automatic Translation

Lost in Automatic Translation

Lost in Automatic Translation

Navigating Life in English in the Age of Language Technologies
Vered Shwartz, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
No date available
Paperback
9781009552332
Paperback

    The last decade has seen an exponential increase in the development and adoption of language technologies, from personal assistants such as Siri and Alexa, through automatic translation, to chatbots like ChatGPT. Yet questions remain about what we stand to lose or gain when we rely on them in our everyday lives. As a non-native English speaker living in an English-speaking country, Vered Shwartz has experienced both amusing and frustrating moments using language technologies: from relying on inaccurate automatic translation, to failing to activate personal assistants with her foreign accent. English is the world's foremost go-to language for communication, and mastering it past the point of literal translation requires acquiring not only vocabulary and grammar rules, but also figurative language, cultural references, and nonverbal communication. Will language technologies aid us in the quest to master foreign languages and better understand one another, or will they make language learning obsolete?

    • Explores how technology is changing the experience of speaking a foreign language
    • Describes common language technologies and how they work, in accessible language
    • Summarizes research in linguistics and computer science about language and language technologies

    Product details

    No date available
    Paperback
    9781009552332
    208 pages
    229 × 152 mm

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • Part I. Communicating in English:
    • 1. Can we have a word?
    • 2. Call the grammar police
    • Part II. Understanding Cultural Norms and References:
    • 3. Reading between the lines
    • 4. A figure of speech
    • 5. To put it delicately
    • 6. Grounded in reality
    • 7. Internet speak is the best, don't @ me
    • Part III. Cultural Integration through Language
    • 8. Can you repeat this, please?
    • 9. The unspeakable
    • 10. The secret code of body language
    • 11. Language and identity
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • Vered Shwartz , University of British Columbia, Vancouver

      Vered Shwartz is Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of British Columbia and a CIFAR AI chair at the Vector Institute. She specializes in natural language processing and has published extensively in top-tier journals and conferences.