Paper by Steven Bird: “How do we roll out language technologies across a world with 7,000 languages? In one story, we scale the successes of NLP further into ‘low-resource’ languages, doing ever more with less. However, this approach does not recognise the fact that – beyond the 500 institutional languages – the remaining languages are oral vernaculars. These speech communities interact with the outside world using a ‘con-
tact language’. I argue that contact languages are the appropriate target for technologies like speech recognition and machine translation, and that the 6,500 oral vernaculars should be approached differently. I share stories from an Indigenous community where local people reshaped an extractive agenda to align with their relational agenda. I describe the emerging paradigm of Relational NLP and explain how it opens the way to non-extractive methods and to solutions that enhance human agency…(More)”
Must NLP be Extractive?
How to contribute:
Did you come across – or create – a compelling project/report/book/app at the leading edge of innovation in governance?
Share it with us at info@thelivinglib.org so that we can add it to the Collection!
About the Curator
Get the latest news right in your inbox
Subscribe to curated findings and actionable knowledge from The Living Library, delivered to your inbox every Friday
Related articles
Collective Intelligence
Crowdsourcing
PEOPLE
A Crowdsourced Topic Map and Future Research Agenda for Women’s Health
Posted in May 18, 2026 by Stefaan Verhulst
Citizen Engagement
PEOPLE
People-centered evaluation: Theory and Action
Posted in May 17, 2026 by Stefaan Verhulst
DATA
Data Collaboratives
Open Data
Blind spots
Posted in May 17, 2026 by Stefaan Verhulst