The dream of a universal translation device goes back many decades, long before Douglas Adams's fictional Babel fish provided this service in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Since the advent of computers, research has focused on the design of digital machine translation tools—computer programs capable of automatically translating a text from a source language to a target language. This has become one of the most fundamental tasks of artificial intelligence. This volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series offers a concise, nontechnical overview of the development of machine translation, including the different approaches, evaluation issues, and market potential. The main approaches are presented from a largely historical perspective and in an intuitive manner, allowing the reader to understand the main principles without knowing the mathematical details.
Memory
Fergus Craik, Larry Jacoby
audiobookAlgorithms
Panos Louridas
audiobookEspionage : A Concise History
Kristie Macrakis
audiobookCausal Inference
Paul R. Rosenbaum
audiobookPragmatism
John R. Shook
audiobookFertility Technology
Donna J. Drucker
audiobookCynicism
Ansgar Allen
audiobookSpatial Computing
Pamela Vold, Shashi Shekhar
audiobookfMRI
Peter A. Bandettini
audiobookIrony and Sarcasm
Roger Kreuz
audiobookContraception : A Concise History
Donna J. Drucker
audiobookExtraterrestrials
Wade Roush
audiobook