25 April 2024
'I mostly collaborate with Computational Linguists, Digital Anthropologists and Civil Society Actors. We use data science methods to make power asymmetries and their consequences for marginalized speaker communities visible.'
'There are two projects that I like a lot.
Project #1: We collaborate with indigenous people in the Amazon to investigate how language digitization can be a means to (re)vitalize indigenous knowledge among younger generations.
Here is some community material covering relations between digital technology, data and indigenous knowledge for water preservation. This was jointly produced with local scientists, indigenous leaders and research from the UvA.
Project #2: We collaborate with Respond Crisis Translation, an NGO working to provide high-quality translation in the refugee context, to analyze how Language Modeling Bias can lead to flawed results in popular machine translation applications and how this, then again, can lead to legitimate asylum requests being denied.
Aspects of this work have been published already, which you can read here. It has also been covered by The Guardian and other popular news outlets.'
'I like to learn about the range of possible research questions that can be approached with data science methods. In the DSC Data Ethics workshop that I gave in February, I found it interesting to hear the issues that people brought up from their own work with data.'
'It really depends on the task!'
'Python.'