Creating Value at the Boundary Between Humans and Machines

Daniel Marcu


Abstract
For a long time, machine translation and professional translation vendors have had a contentious relation. However, new tools, computing platforms, and business models are changing the fundamentals of this relationship. I will review the main trends in the area while emphasizing both past causes of failure and main drivers of success.
Anthology ID:
2010.jec-1.1
Volume:
Proceedings of the Second Joint EM+/CNGL Workshop: Bringing MT to the User: Research on Integrating MT in the Translation Industry
Month:
November 4
Year:
2010
Address:
Denver, Colorado, USA
Venues:
AMTA | JEC
SIG:
Publisher:
Association for Machine Translation in the Americas
Note:
Pages:
1–3
Language:
URL:
https://aclanthology.org/2010.jec-1.1
DOI:
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
Daniel Marcu. 2010. Creating Value at the Boundary Between Humans and Machines. In Proceedings of the Second Joint EM+/CNGL Workshop: Bringing MT to the User: Research on Integrating MT in the Translation Industry, pages 1–3, Denver, Colorado, USA. Association for Machine Translation in the Americas.
Cite (Informal):
Creating Value at the Boundary Between Humans and Machines (Marcu, JEC 2010)
Copy Citation:
PDF:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/update-css-js/2010.jec-1.1.pdf