Principal Investigator James Glass
Co-investigators Victor Zue , Stephanie Seneff
Project Website http://groups.csail.mit.edu/sls/research/multilingual.shtml
For over a decade, SLS researchers have been developing multilingual spoken dialogue systems. The goal of this work is to enable people to interact with machines in their preferred language. Much of the efforts have been devoted towards developing multilingual interfaces; systems that are capable of supporting conversational interaction in more than one language. Several European and Asian languages have been explored, including French, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, and Mandarin. Currently, most efforts are focused on Mandarin-based systems, especially with regards to language learning and translation. We have also begun to explore Arabic-based processing for Arabic-to-English and English-to-Arabic translation.
Much of the research in the speech and language community to date has focused on a relatively small subset of resource rich languages, such as English. It remains an open research problem to port spoken language technology to languages with less well developed resources, and without the intensive engineering efforts that have been associated with existing languages.