@inproceedings{martindale-etal-2021-machine,
title = "Machine Translation Believability",
author = "Martindale, Marianna and
Duh, Kevin and
Carpuat, Marine",
editor = "Blodgett, Su Lin and
Madaio, Michael and
O'Connor, Brendan and
Wallach, Hanna and
Yang, Qian",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the First Workshop on Bridging Human{--}Computer Interaction and Natural Language Processing",
month = apr,
year = "2021",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2021.hcinlp-1.14/",
pages = "88--95",
abstract = "Successful Machine Translation (MT) deployment requires understanding not only the intrinsic qualities of MT output, such as fluency and adequacy, but also user perceptions. Users who do not understand the source language respond to MT output based on their perception of the likelihood that the meaning of the MT output matches the meaning of the source text. We refer to this as believability. Output that is not believable may be off-putting to users, but believable MT output with incorrect meaning may mislead them. In this work, we study the relationship of believability to fluency and adequacy by applying traditional MT direct assessment protocols to annotate all three features on the output of neural MT systems. Quantitative analysis of these annotations shows that believability is closely related to but distinct from fluency, and initial qualitative analysis suggests that semantic features may account for the difference."
}
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<abstract>Successful Machine Translation (MT) deployment requires understanding not only the intrinsic qualities of MT output, such as fluency and adequacy, but also user perceptions. Users who do not understand the source language respond to MT output based on their perception of the likelihood that the meaning of the MT output matches the meaning of the source text. We refer to this as believability. Output that is not believable may be off-putting to users, but believable MT output with incorrect meaning may mislead them. In this work, we study the relationship of believability to fluency and adequacy by applying traditional MT direct assessment protocols to annotate all three features on the output of neural MT systems. Quantitative analysis of these annotations shows that believability is closely related to but distinct from fluency, and initial qualitative analysis suggests that semantic features may account for the difference.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Machine Translation Believability
%A Martindale, Marianna
%A Duh, Kevin
%A Carpuat, Marine
%Y Blodgett, Su Lin
%Y Madaio, Michael
%Y O’Connor, Brendan
%Y Wallach, Hanna
%Y Yang, Qian
%S Proceedings of the First Workshop on Bridging Human–Computer Interaction and Natural Language Processing
%D 2021
%8 April
%I Association for Computational Linguistics
%C Online
%F martindale-etal-2021-machine
%X Successful Machine Translation (MT) deployment requires understanding not only the intrinsic qualities of MT output, such as fluency and adequacy, but also user perceptions. Users who do not understand the source language respond to MT output based on their perception of the likelihood that the meaning of the MT output matches the meaning of the source text. We refer to this as believability. Output that is not believable may be off-putting to users, but believable MT output with incorrect meaning may mislead them. In this work, we study the relationship of believability to fluency and adequacy by applying traditional MT direct assessment protocols to annotate all three features on the output of neural MT systems. Quantitative analysis of these annotations shows that believability is closely related to but distinct from fluency, and initial qualitative analysis suggests that semantic features may account for the difference.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2021.hcinlp-1.14/
%P 88-95
Markdown (Informal)
[Machine Translation Believability](https://aclanthology.org/2021.hcinlp-1.14/) (Martindale et al., HCINLP 2021)
ACL
- Marianna Martindale, Kevin Duh, and Marine Carpuat. 2021. Machine Translation Believability. In Proceedings of the First Workshop on Bridging Human–Computer Interaction and Natural Language Processing, pages 88–95, Online. Association for Computational Linguistics.