Translation is AI Complete… Why?

To translate accurately, a machine must be able to understand the text. It must be able to follow the author's argument, so it must have some ability to reason. It must have extensive world knowledge so that it knows what is being discussed — it must at least be familiar with all the same commonsense facts that the average human translator knows. Some of this knowledge is in the form of facts that can be explicitly represented, but some knowledge is unconscious and closely tied to the human body: for example, the machine may need to understand how an ocean makes one feel to accurately translate a specific metaphor in the text. It must also model the authors' goals, intentions,...

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FIT (International Federation of Translators) World Congress 2017

International Federation of Translators (FIT) World Congress was held in Brisbane from 3 August 2017 to 5 August 2017. A huge number of participants (700+), a great conference venue (Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre) and wonderful presenters with new and inspiring ideas about interpreting and translation. A number of social events were of course the highlights of the conference (or any conferences, I dare say) - a night cruise on Kookaburra Queen and the gala dinner overlooking Southbank and Brisbane River. The full conference photos are here. The FIT 2017 concluded with so many applauses and gratitudes. See you all at Cuba in 2020.

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The human brain is hardwired with an innate understanding of language

How do human learn languages? It has been a long-standing question with so many attempted answers. Back in the 1960s, the linguist and political activist Noam Chomsky claimed that. This became known as the Universal Grammar theory, and was offered as an explanation of the speed at which children tend to learn their first language. Genetically, the human mind is predisposed to making sense of words and arranging them in a logical sequence as we overcome the initial disorder of learning a language. https://theconversation.com/our-ability-to-recognise-letters-could-be-hard-wired-into-our-brains-83991  

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