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Machine Translation/Evidence
Method evidence record

Machine Translation

Machine translation (MT) is a natural-language-processing task that automatically converts text in one language into another. Modern MT is built on neural sequence-to-sequence models — the attention mechanism introduced by Bahdanau et al. (2015) and the transformer architecture of Vaswani et al. (2017) — and it widens access to sources for multilingual data analysis and research.

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Source record

Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.

Machine Translation
Taxonomic method record · process-pipeline / text-mining
  • Bahdanau, D., Cho, K. & Bengio, Y. (2015). Neural Machine Translation by Jointly Learning to Align and Translate. International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR). · URL
  • Vaswani, A., Shazeer, N., Parmar, N., Uszkoreit, J., Jones, L., Gomez, A. N., Kaiser, L. & Polosukhin, I. (2017). Attention Is All You Need. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS). · URL
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Curated claims

Claims persisted in the evidence ledger, each with its own assessment.

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Related methods

Generated from the method graph and shown as machine-suggested relations — no evidence claim is inferred.

Same method familyCross-lingual Text Analysismachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyPOS Taggingmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familySentiment Analysismachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

Evidence status

Sources recorded, not reviewed

Bibliographic sources are present. Claim-level evidence review has not been performed.

Sources

2 recorded citations, copied from the method source record.

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