A framework of a mechanical translation between Japanese and English by analogy principle
Proc. of the international NATO symposium on Artificial and human intelligence
Numerical recipes: the art of scientific computing
Numerical recipes: the art of scientific computing
Handbook of mathematics (3rd ed.)
Handbook of mathematics (3rd ed.)
End-to-End Evaluation in JANUS: A Speech-to-speech Translation System
ECAI '96 Workshop on Dialogue Processing in Spoken Language Systems
Hybrid Language Processing in the Spoken Language Translator
ICASSP '97 Proceedings of the 1997 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP '97) -Volume 1 - Volume 1
Computer-assisted translation systems: the standard design and a multi-level design
ANLC '83 Proceedings of the first conference on Applied natural language processing
Three heads are better than one
ANLC '94 Proceedings of the fourth conference on Applied natural language processing
Toward memory-based translation
COLING '90 Proceedings of the 13th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 3
Experiments with a powerful parser
COLING '67 Proceedings of the 1967 conference on Computational linguistics
Example-Based Machine Translation in the Pangloss system
COLING '96 Proceedings of the 16th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
An MAT tool and its effectiveness
HLT '93 Proceedings of the workshop on Human Language Technology
Language As a Cognitive Process: Syntax
Language As a Cognitive Process: Syntax
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The Multi-Engine MT (MEMT) architecture combines the outputs of multiple MT engines using a statistical language model of the target language. It has been used successfully in a number of MT research systems, for both text and speech translation. Despite its perceived benefits, there has never been a rigorous, published, double-blind evaluation of the claim that the combined output of a MEMT system is in fact better than that of any one of the component MT engines. We report here the results of such an evaluation. The combined MEMT output is shown to indeed be better overall than the output of the component engines in a Croatian ↔ English MT system. This result is consistent in both translation directions, and between different raters.