Generative AI Translation: Proceed with Caution – Spiceworks News and Insights

Heather Shoemaker, founder of Language I/O, discusses the complexities and solutions to achieving seamless multilingual communication in this in-depth analysis.

Artificial intelligence has made remarkable strides in natural language processing (NLP). In this era of technological evolution, the boundaries of machine translation are being pushed to unprecedented levels, and the rise of generative AI has only added to that push.

The language translation technology industry is booming and shows no sign of slowing. The global language translation software market was valued at $10.81 billion in 2022Opens a new window and is expected to skyrocket to $35.93 billion by 2030.

Enter NLP-based language translation platforms like ChatGPT, Google Translate, and Microsoft Translator, all large language models (LLMs), and computer programs trained on huge amounts of publicly available data. These sophisticated programs can understand the human language patterns and the intent or meaning behind the language. While some hail these cutting-edge tools as a panacea for solving all business problems, generative AI solutions still arent quite ready to meet businesses complete language translation needs.

Questions have also arisen about whether businesses can trust generative AI for accurate language translation and whether this technology is secure. In the wake of these questions, the best course of action forward is to proceed cautiously.

So heres the problem. Gen AI is great at quickly generating content (and coding and translating, too). And training it on specific data yields the most accurate and useful responses. Unfortunately, gen AI often lacks the context to produce the best results because it hasnt been trained on industry or business-specific data. Just as a general LLM, such as ChatGPT, cant accurately answer questions about a companys proprietary content it was never trained on. A general LLM or an untrained, AI-powered translation platform such as Google cannot accurately translate content for a domain it was never trained on, either. In both cases, the AI lacks the needed context.

Although businesses benefit from investing in real-time translation technology in lieu of hiring additional multilingual employees, the tool/tech needs the proper training. Customer satisfaction increases when the right tech is in place to help current team members communicate effortlessly with customers regardless of their language.

The number of independent machine translation services available has increased sixfold since 2017. Despite this notable uptick, generative AI translation models remain under development. They are known for unreliability, hallucinations, or general responses based on general data, especially when asked to tackle complex or nuanced texts. Generative AI works best with well-constructed inputs, but in a business setting, where people of different backgrounds and familiarity (or lack thereof) with language technology are using chatbots to request information or ask for help in real-time, communication could be better. Chatbots also give internal teams another quick way to access data. Some traits of real-time communication that can trip up translations include:

There are plenty of pathways leading to sub-par generative AI translation outputs. Without contextualizing technology and training employees to use it and feed it the correct inputs, organizations cant trust generative AI translations will achieve the caliber needed for success in a customer service or business environment.

See More: Why Source Recall Matters: Building Trust in AI

The generative AI boom saw exponential growth in the space, but policies and protections associated with AI still need to catch up with the technology. For example, while 86% of organizationsOpens a new window adopting AI say its critical to have guidelines about its ethical usage, only 6% have implemented policies outlining responsible use. This policy gap leaves plenty of space for potential pitfalls when using generative AI tools, including:

As generative AI usage continues to grow, future iterations of these LLMs will likely solve at least some of these problems. Still, until then, organizations must implement responsible use policies.

See More: Biden Signs Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence Protections

Most well-known LLMs are trained on data in English or Chinese. As technology continues to influence the reframing of work, education, art, business, and more, the more than 6 billion worldwide who speak 7,000 other languages are at risk of being left out. For example, Meta warned that its updated LLM released in July would work best with queries in English because most of its training data was in that language, saying, the model may not be suitable for use in other languages.

For organizations that want to facilitate multilingual communication with global customer bases, this language gap further illustrates the shortcomings of generative AI tools. To achieve the best real-time communications, the smartest organizations invest in contextualizing technology. For generative AI platforms, this involves some form of domain adaptation such as prompt engineering, RAG (retrieval augmented generation), or fine-tuning.

However, to ensure a generative AI platform can accurately answer questions in multiple languages as well as translate between languages for a specific business, this domain adaptation has to occur not just in the base language but across all the languages the company supports. Gartner found that companies find the process of training AI in just one language more difficult than they expected it to be. Further, according to artificial solutions, when faced with the task of duplicating that training across all supported languages, companies are abandoning the effort. Companies are in dire need of a solution that automates the multilingual domain adaptation on their behalf, such as those provided by Language I/O.

That effort is worthwhile, however, because implementing this technology can help properly translate previously problematic language like misspellings, jargon, or slang. Please prioritize this contextualizing aspect to avoid incoherent conversations and, ultimately, dissatisfied customers.

Even though LLM-based technologies are popular, they cant yet produce the most accurate business translations. Utilizing contextualizing technology, such as that provided by Language I/O, alongside generative AI tools, can help achieve top-notch translations. Investing in this type of technology maximizes existing headcount, shortens wait times, increases availability to 24/7, and supports more world languages, saving money and resources while driving customer satisfaction, employee inclusivity, and overall business success.

How can businesses overcome the hurdles in generative AI translation? Let us know on FacebookOpens a new window , XOpens a new window , and LinkedInOpens a new window . Wed love to hear from you!

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Generative AI Translation: Proceed with Caution - Spiceworks News and Insights

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