NMT Archives - Microsoft Translator Blog http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-us/translator/blog/tag/nmt/ Wed, 19 Apr 2017 19:39:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Microsoft Translator Apps Switch all Chinese and Japanese Language translations to Neural Network Technology http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-us/translator/blog/2017/04/19/microsoft-translator-apps-switch-all-chinese-and-japanese-language-translations-to-neural-network-technology/ Wed, 19 Apr 2017 19:39:26 +0000 https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/translation/?p=5315 Today, Microsoft Translator announces that all translations between Chinese, English, and Japanese in the Microsoft Translator apps (Windows, iOS, Android, and Kindle) and on www.bing.com/translator are now exclusively using neural network (NN) translation technology. It applies to the following text translations: English <-> Chinese Simplified, Traditional, and Cantonese English <-> Japanese Chinese (all) <-> Japanese   In addition to this....

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Today, Microsoft Translator announces that all translations between Chinese, English, and Japanese in the Microsoft Translator apps (Windows, iOS, Android, and Kindle) and on www.bing.com/translator are now exclusively using neural network (NN) translation technology.

It applies to the following text translations:

English <-> Chinese Simplified, Traditional, and Cantonese

English <-> Japanese

Chinese (all) <-> Japanese

 

In addition to this new capability, all speech translations are already using neural translations for the ten supported speech translation languages (Arabic, Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish) in both the Microsoft Translator live and Skype Translator features.

 

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Neural translations generate more fluent and more human sounding translations by using the context of a full sentence rather than just a few adjacent words. Using a multi-dimensional representation (a) of each word for a given translation pair (e.g. English-Chinese), multiple layers of the neural network build a larger multi-dimensional representation of this word within the context of the full sentence (b). The last layer uses these representations to translate words with the most appropriate translation given the sentence and in the most logical order in the target language sentence(c).

Microsoft’s AI-powered translation system delivers the most significant improvement in machine translation quality since statistical machine translation became the industry standard ten years ago. These improvements in quality and fluency have resulted in translations that are the closest they have ever been to human-generated ones.  You can compare the improved translations on all 11 available languages at http://translate.ai.

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Japanese becomes the 10th speech translation language supported by Microsoft Translator http://approjects.co.za/?big=en-us/translator/blog/2017/04/06/japanese-becomes-the-10th-speech-translation-language-supported-by-microsoft-translator/ Thu, 06 Apr 2017 21:04:38 +0000 https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/translation/?p=5235 Today, Microsoft Translator announces the availability of its 10th speech translation language: Japanese. This new language is now available across all Microsoft Translator supported technologies and products along with the already released nine other speech translation languages: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. Microsoft Translator is the first end-to-end speech translation solution optimized for real-life conversations....

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Tokyo tower and Mt. Fuji

Today, Microsoft Translator announces the availability of its 10th speech translation language: Japanese. This new language is now available across all Microsoft Translator supported technologies and products along with the already released nine other speech translation languages: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish.

Microsoft Translator is the first end-to-end speech translation solution optimized for real-life conversations (vs. simple human to machine commands) available on the market. It is one of the services in Microsoft’s portfolio of artificial intelligence technologies designed to make AI accessible to all.

Speech translation is a hard problem to solve, as is always the case when machines are trying to mimic a deeply human capability.  It uses two neural-network based Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies: Automatic Speech Recognition and Machine Translation. It also uses a unique natural language processing technology (TrueText) and a speech synthesizer, aka “Text to Speech”, which enables users to hear, and not only read, the translation.

These technologies are then connected to perform the speech translation function:

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  1. The sound is transcribed into text through the speech recognition AI
  2. TrueText then processes this text to remove unnecessary speech elements, such as redundant words or fillers like “um” (English) or “eto” (Japanese), that would generate poor translations
  3. The machine translation AI then translates each word using the context of the full sentence
  4. Finally, the text to speech generates the audio output from this translated text

 

With this release, businesses, developers, and end users alike will be able to use Japanese in the various apps and services offered or powered by Microsoft Translator:

You can translate any of the supported 10 Translator speech languages into any of the supported 60+ Translator text languages.

In addition to the availability of Japanese as a speech translation language, starting today, all text translations from English to Japanese (and vice-versa) in Microsoft products and services will exclusively use these new and improved neural network translations system. Whether you translate a webpage in Edge, an email in Outlook, or a simple sentence on www.bing.com/translator, all of your translations will be performed with our state of the art neural network systems.

Read more about this news in our Microsoft Japan blog (in Japanese)

Learn More

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