Cross-Lingual Information access, retrieval, extraction, ... needs, requirements and current state of the art
moderator: Khalid Choukri,
ELDA - Evaluations and Language resources Distribution Agency
author: Jochen L. Leidner, Thomson Reuters
author: Allan Hanbury, Vienna University of Technology
author: Leonoor van der Beek, Q-go Europe
published: March 26, 2011, recorded: December 2009, views: 3503
author: Jochen L. Leidner, Thomson Reuters
author: Allan Hanbury, Vienna University of Technology
author: Leonoor van der Beek, Q-go Europe
published: March 26, 2011, recorded: December 2009, views: 3503
Related content
Report a problem or upload files
If you have found a problem with this lecture or would like to send us extra material, articles, exercises, etc., please use our ticket system to describe your request and upload the data.Enter your e-mail into the 'Cc' field, and we will keep you updated with your request's status.
Description
The main topics that were addressed were the following:
- The needs of large users of multilingual information archives and their requirements, expectations
- The current offers for enterprise search and web
- What is preventing the take off of cross-lingual search applications
The theme of the panel discussion was why, despite 10 years of MLIA evaluations (within TREC, CLEF, NTCIR programmes), the adoption of such technologies is still a questionable issue. This session was organized around a series of questions which were circulated to the panelist beforehand. The list of questions was as follows:
- During the last ten years or so, the number of languages and domains, for which research and development on MLIA have been conducted, has increased massively; is there any killer application that emerged from such clusters?
- Have we managed to assess performance and are these in line with application deployments; are these two concepts strongly related (performance, deployments)?
- Did the evaluations consider the right needs and requirements, and by the way do we have a clear picture of these?
- If no success story can be mentioned today, does that mean key players were left out of these evaluations? Why?
- If players were among the participants, does that mean we do have applications/core-technology with performances that can not be offered to real users?
- And what offers do MLIA players have that one can highlight today, in particular for use by professionals?
- Can we imagine fulfilling the needs of all languages and all domains at a reasonable cost (money, time, ...)?
- How can the panelists (and the participants) address these issues and establish pointers to high levels of cooperation between users, service providers and core-technology providers (including computational linguistics?
Link this page
Would you like to put a link to this lecture on your homepage?Go ahead! Copy the HTML snippet !
Write your own review or comment: