This book analyzes the relationship between technology, language, and translation in the digital age. Language issues covered include an automatic football commentary system, the use of digital humanities in the versification of Classical Chinese poetry, the application of corpus linguistics in identity construction in Hong Kong, Cantonese speech recognition, and the use of AI in a Chabot system. Other chapters look at translation matters, such as technologies for interpreting, neural machine translation for press releases, computer-aided annotation for translator and interpreter training, and artificial intelligence and translation. As language and translation are closely intertwined, together, these chapters illustrate the drastic changes that technology has brought to these combined areas.
A vital resource for scholars and students studying the impact of technology on language and translation.
Leung Sze Ming is Vice-President (Administration) at the Saint Francis University in Hong Kong. She earned her PhD in Education at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Her research interests include teacher feedback, writing instruction, and the use of ICT in language teaching and learning.
Chan Sin-wai holds a PhD from London University, UK. He is Professor-cum-Dean of the Ip Ying To Lee Yu Yee School of Humanities and Languages, Saint Francis University, Hong Kong. His research interests are translation technology and bilingual lexicography. He has published 95 academic books in 116 volumes to date.