- From: Milton Ponson <rwiciamsd@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2024 13:13:33 -0400
- To: paoladimaio10@googlemail.com
- Cc: W3C AIKR CG <public-aikr@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CA+L6P4wfKC-vFoNYHpbMHiqCiHbA1E_hrUg-9F037Y422XF6NQ@mail.gmail.com>
it all depends on what the glossary will be input for. If you want the glossary to be used to structure machine readable input for either coding or planning or if you want a pure linguistics style glossary or dictionary. For the latter you need to research https://www.sil.org/language-development . For all other tools a simple Google search will spit out an enormous amount of options. We could narrow the search by checking which IT tools are used by AI institutes around the world, and since the EU has its own EU AI Act now the obvious choice would be institutes in EU member countries. Which begs the other question, is there a global ranking of institutes and university research departments that focus on the general field of AI? All of these would be potential consumers of glossaries, and may want to collaborate on creating glossaries. Milton Ponson Rainbow Warriors Core Foundation CIAMSD Institute-ICT4D Program +2977459312 PO Box 1154, Oranjestad Aruba, Dutch Caribbean On Mon, Dec 2, 2024 at 11:06 PM Paola Di Maio <paola.dimaio@gmail.com> wrote: > Knowledgeable CG members > > Since the future is here, suggestions as to how to generate > a vocabulary, would be great (preferably open, free, online tool or python > script?) > Process > 1.select source of K (upload or point to source doc) > 2. extract key terms and definitions > 3. compare key terms with existing glossaries/vocabularies already > published (input URLs) > 4. if not included in existing resources in 3 OR > if definition is different from the same term in existing resource > in 3 > THEN > 5. include term in a list (to be discussed, evaluated, refined) > > I definitely buy drinks is someone can do >
Received on Tuesday, 3 December 2024 17:13:48 UTC