TY - JOUR
T1 - Participatory Research as a Path to Community-Informed, Gender-Fair Machine Translation
AU - Gromann, Dagmar
AU - Lardelli, Manuel
AU - Spiel, Katta
AU - Burtscher, Sabrina
AU - Klausner, Lukas Daniel
AU - Mettinger, Arthur
AU - Miladinovic, Igor
AU - Schefer-Wenzl, Sigrid
AU - Duh, Daniela
AU - Bühn, Katharina
N1 - 11 pages, 4 figures
PY - 2023/6/15
Y1 - 2023/6/15
N2 - Recent years have seen a strongly increased visibility of non-binary people in public discourse. Accordingly, considerations of gender-fair language go beyond a binary conception of male/female. However, language technology, especially machine translation (MT), still suffers from binary gender bias. Proposing a solution for gender-fair MT beyond the binary from a purely technological perspective might fall short to accommodate different target user groups and in the worst case might lead to misgendering. To address this challenge, we propose a method and case study building on participatory action research to include experiential experts, i.e., queer and non-binary people, translators, and MT experts, in the MT design process. The case study focuses on German, where central findings are the importance of context dependency to avoid identity invalidation and a desire for customizable MT solutions.
AB - Recent years have seen a strongly increased visibility of non-binary people in public discourse. Accordingly, considerations of gender-fair language go beyond a binary conception of male/female. However, language technology, especially machine translation (MT), still suffers from binary gender bias. Proposing a solution for gender-fair MT beyond the binary from a purely technological perspective might fall short to accommodate different target user groups and in the worst case might lead to misgendering. To address this challenge, we propose a method and case study building on participatory action research to include experiential experts, i.e., queer and non-binary people, translators, and MT experts, in the MT design process. The case study focuses on German, where central findings are the importance of context dependency to avoid identity invalidation and a desire for customizable MT solutions.
KW - cs.CL
KW - cs.CY
M3 - Article
JO - Proceedings of the First Workshop on Gender-Inclusive Translation Technologies
JF - Proceedings of the First Workshop on Gender-Inclusive Translation Technologies
ER -