Will translation software sound the death knell for interpreters?
A Chinese doctor tries to communicate with her Mexican patient with the help of Baidu translate app on her smartphone.[Photo provided to China Daily] |
"It earned the honor for its technological merit and social significance," Wang Haifeng, vice-president of Baidu, said.
"The Baidu Translate App can recognize text, voices and even pictures. For example, travellers can take a photo of the menu and the app will read the menu and do the translation."
Wang has led the research team for Baidu Translate over the past six years. He said the software can now translate 27 languages, currently has 500 million users worldwide and responds to over 100 million translation requirements every day.
It is often used by online retailers to translate product descriptions, saving them the cost of hiring translators.
And it is expanding quickly, taking them only about 11 days to launch a new language, Wang said.
"We collect bilingual data on the Internet, the computer will then study the data automatically and form translation models accordingly," he said.
But the rapid development of machine translations has raised concerns that translating jobs may soon be endangered and whether learning a second language will soon be useless.
Zou Tingfang, an interpreter involved in legal work, believes automated translations are unlikely to beat translators in the foreseeable future.
"I use software when doing translations, but I never use it when interpreting. Machines still have many limits," she said. "Language, especially when spoken, is lively and dynamic. Machines cannot handle changes as adequately as human beings. For example, when interpreting, one word can have more than ten meanings depending on the occasion. Machines still cannot precisely distinguish different contexts."
But automated translations can be accurate for translating languages with fixed context, such as billboards, online games or contracts, she said.