Title: Denmark in Europe: Benchmarking HLT Research
1Denmark in Europe Benchmarking HLT Research
Development
- EUROMAP National Seminar - Copenhagen
- 30 April 2003
- Rose Lockwood
- Director of Research, Bowne Global Solutions
2The EUROMAP Final Report Benchmarking HLT
Progress
- COVERING
- State-of-the-Art in HLT
- The Shape and Evolution of the Market
- Driving Next-Generation HLT Policy Imperatives
- The HLT Scorecard
- HLT Benchmark
- HLT Opportunity Index
- Conclusions Recommendations
3State-of-the-Art in HLT
- What is HLT and who are the companies making it
happen? - Segmentation of the technologies
- Introduction to applications and opportunities
for technology transfer - Review of types of HLT players in Europe
- Snap-shot profiles illustrative of the rich HLT
scene in Europe - Comprehensive directory of European researchers
and suppliers (to be published separately) - Showing focus and types of applications
- Languages covered by tools and products
4From components to complex solutions the focus
of HLT applications
5Grounded in the basics suppliers of
Componentware and Resources
- Neurosoft (Greece) Greek language components
for text mining - Polderland Language Speech Technology
(Netherlands) - Core components for multiple
languages - Connexor (Finland) Embedded multilingual
language analysers - Daedalus (Spain) - Document processing tools for
Castilian
6Innovators - Interface and Interaction
- Telisma (France) Speech recognition for
telecommunications voice services - Auralog (France) Speech technology for the
language learning industry - Sympalog (Germany) State-of-the-art voice
dialog systems - Loquendo (Italy) A global speech technology
powerhouse - Rhetorical Systems (UK) - High quality speech
synthesis in multiple languages
7Innovators in Cross-Lingual Applications
- ESTeam (Sweden) - Resource-driven translation
automation - Sail Labs Technology (Austria) - An advanced
language understanding agenda - Synthema (Italy) Tools for multilingual
knowledge management - Systran (France) Industrial-strength machine
translation - Aixplain (Germany) Cross-lingual solutions for
speech and text
8Innovators in HLT-based Knowledge Processing
- Ankiro (Denmark) User-centric dialogue and
knowledge robots - Language Computing (Belgium) - Semantics for
medical knowledge - Xtramind Technologies (Germany) Intelligent
enterprise information processing - Knowledge Concepts (Netherlands) - Boosting
cross-lingual access to corporate content - Wordmap (UK) Enterprise Taxonomy Management
Systems
9Ankiro - Products based on (English) language
tools and databases
- Advanced products that promote effective
communication, information searching and
knowledge management. - Dialog robots used for
- Guidance (e.g. as guides on web sites)
- Support (e.g. as Call centre robots and FAQ
robots) - Entertainment (e.g. chat robots)
- Search engines and crawlers include
- Web search engines (available both as index based
search and as full-text search) - Site search engines (searches on a company's web
page) - Intranet search engines (searches through all of
a company's databases) - Lotus search engines (plug-ins for effective
searches in Lotus applications)
10Crossing the Chasm with Language Technology
embedded solutions
niche products
components
Market Take-up
Original Chart Source Geoffrey Moore, The Chasm
Group
11Market Forecast Speech and Language Applications
TOTAL HLT product market circa 2B in 2004
CAGR 21
1600
50
1400
40
Total revenues
1200
language
Year on year growth
30
1000
speech
Revenues (m)
Year on year growth ()
20
800
600
10
400
0
200
0
-10
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Source Datamonitor, Voice Business Quarterly
Update (Q3 2002)
Source Steve McClure, IDC (2002)
12Policy - Background and Evolution
- How important is HLT from a policy perspective?
- How has public investment supported the domain,
and - Who are the Showcase Labs?
- How has public-sector investment in HLT evolved
over the years? - National and EU programme timelines
13Programme Support and HLT Transfer to Market
14Are we ready for the next generation?Benchmarking
HLT in Europe
Demand-side Factors
Technology Development
Supply-side Factors
15Benchmarking Method
- Measuring HLT maturity
- Factors include research and tech-transfer
record, rates-of-investment (at national level,
both public and private), breadth of language
coverage - Measuring HLT opportunity
- Factors include infrastructure and business
environment - Combining data from varied sources to establish a
useful benchmarking scale - HCID/World Economic Forum survey - uses a 1-to-7
rating scale (1poor, 7excellent) for a wide
range of questions - Other studies normalised to this scale
(Innovation Scorecard, EITO ICT infrastructure
data, EuroStat, OECD, EUROMAP HLT maturity, etc.)
16How to measure HLT maturity
- Expert opinion/knowledge of the research scene
- Review of activities, actors, players
- suppliers
- projects
- researchers
- Review of quasi-quantitative measures including
- projects-per-country (based on hltcentral
database and other sources for pre-FP4/5
programmes) - experts/individuals with HLT focus per country
(based on CDB and ELSNET contacts list) - citations per country - from proceedings of
major HLT conferences (EACL, ACL, COLING, MT
Summit, Applied ACL, TMI, CLAW, Eurospeech,
ICSLP, LREC)
17Consolidated Results HLT Benchmark Opportunity
HLT Scorecard
LEADERS
HLT Opportunity
EU-14
HLT Benchmark
18Key Findings Denmark
19Key Findings Denmark vs EU average
20HLT Indexes Denmark
EU Average
HLT RTD Tech Transfer
HLT RTD Investment
HLT Language Breadth
21Scorecard Comparing Denmark to EU Leaders
22Denmark Key Findings
- Denmark scores to the EU average on measures of
robustness in HLT research - Strong tradition of text and NLP applications,
and speech research is well represented. - Active professional translation community,
including a dedicated machine translation system
for processing patent documents between English
and Danish. - Five major HLT research centres, one of which
acts as a national centre of excellence for
language technology. - Denmark has about seven HLT suppliers, though not
all of them are dedicated language-technology
focused companies
23Denmark Strengths
- Traditionally export-focused country with strong
multilingual capabilities - Excellent cross-border facilitator
- Well-trained RD base in language and speech
technology - Strong EU project participation, and a leading
role in regional Nordic language technology
activities - Healthy business innovation environment and
excellent levels of public infrastructure
readiness - Basic technology components for Danish now exist,
and research is carried out on other languages.
24Denmark Challenges
- Ensuring that the Danish language community can
benefit from speech and language technologies
appropriate to Denmarks high degree of readiness - Industry involvement in HLT research is scarce,
tech-transfer weak - Lack of large-scale high technology channels that
can facilitate the transfer of language and
speech technologies to market - Small local market opportunity
- While 95 of the population are Danish speaking,
the language is highly localised, and not used
widely elsewhere - The transfer of first generation language
technology to the marketplace is still in waiting
mode
25Guide to Action
Strong correlation between Opportunity and HLT
Benchmark
World-Class knowledge-based products and services
DE/NE/FI/UK
SV/DK
Role for stronger HLT RTD and tech-transfer to
match opportunities
Boosting HLT research will pay off due to market
potential
HLT Opportunity
IE/IT/AT
EU-14
HLT lagging due to constraints of the environment
and under-investment in RD
FR/BE/ES
Strong exploitation potential tech-transfer
support key
Infrastructure, investment and national policy
support urgently needed
GR/PT
HLT Benchmark
26General Recommendations
- EU-level
- Collaboration at national level HLT in the ERA
- Structures for visioneering
- Digital Infrastructure for HLT
- Infrastructure Funds for language technology
- Danish national level
- Need for a continued focus on cross-border
collaboration to ensure the future vitality of
the Danish HLT community - within the Nordic Region, and in the wider
European context. - Greater effort at transfer opportunities
- high Internet penetration and networked
educational system - e-government, education and training may provide
new opportunities for exploiting language
technology in an inherently small market.
27Thanks!
- Rose Lockwood
- Director of Research, Bowne Global Solutions
- Cambridge
- 44 1223 350 340
- rose.lockwood_at_equipe.co.uk