Layers of technology in pluriversal design. Decolonising language technology with the LiveLanguage initiative
Gertraud Koch, G\'abor Bella, Paula Helm, Fausto Giunchiglia

TL;DR
This paper explores how to decolonize language technology by applying pluriversal design principles through the LiveLanguage initiative, emphasizing diverse practices and stakeholders to foster inclusive, decolonial language tech development.
Contribution
It introduces a five-layer model of technological activity for co-designing decolonial language technology, bridging pluriversal theory and practical implementation.
Findings
A model with five layers of technological activity for co-design.
Emphasizes stakeholder diversity in language technology development.
Provides a framework for decolonial and pluriversal language tech design.
Abstract
Language technology has the potential to facilitate intercultural communication through meaningful translations. However, the current state of language technology is deeply entangled with colonial knowledge due to path dependencies and neo-colonial tendencies in the global governance of artificial intelligence (AI). Language technology is a complex and emerging field that presents challenges for co-design interventions due to enfolding in assemblages of global scale and diverse sites and its knowledge intensity. This paper uses LiveLanguage, a lexical database, a set of services with particular emphasis on modelling language diversity and integrating small and minority languages, as an example to discuss and close the gap from pluriversal design theory to practice. By diversifying the concept of emerging technology, we can better approach language technology in global contexts. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLinguistics and Education Research · Geography and Education Methods
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
