- From: Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 10:45:46 +0100
- To: Phil Ritchie <philr@vistatec.ie>
- CC: public-multilingualweb-lt-comments@w3.org
- Message-ID: <50CAF54A.2040104@w3.org>
Thanks, Phil. This is now issue-63. When we discuss this we need to take the "stability aspect" http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-multilingualweb-lt-comments/2012Dec/0020.html and the "existing tools" aspect http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-multilingualweb-lt-comments/2012Dec/0004.html See in the latter mail the part "the other types where based on what existing tools or standards initiatives produce. " Can you provide some input on that part? Thanks, Felix Am 14.12.12 08:27, schrieb Phil Ritchie: > I would like to propose the addition of "conformance" to Appendix C > (Values for the Localization Quality Issue Type). > > The values in the appendix cover specific and discrete classes of > error (putting "other" and "unintelligible" to one side). When you > start to apply new text classification based quality checking methods > to text several error classes may combine in subtle ways to produce a > measure of quality that is "aggregate" across error types but > none-the-less accurately indicative that something is wrong. For > example, a target sentence may be deemed to have poor conformance when > measured against a corpus of domain relevant reference translations. A > score would reflect this poor conformance but the underlying errors > within the sentence could be a mixture of grammar, spelling, style > and/or terminology. In such instances you may not need to explicitly > enumerate all of the combining errors and the extent of their > contribution to the score, but just classify it under and umbrella > term of "conformance". > > The proposed information for the "conformance" value would be as follows: > > *Value* > > conformance > > *Description* > > The content is deemed to have a level of conformance to a reference > corpus. Reflects the degree to which the text conforms to a reference > corpus given an algorithm which combines several classes of error type > to produce an aggregate rating. Higher values reflect poorer conformance. > > *Example* > > "The harbour connected which to printer is busy or configared not > properly." In a system which uses classification techniques this would > be deemed to have poor conformance. The poor conformance is a function > of the combined incorrect terminology, wrong spelling and bad grammar. > > *Scope* > > S or T > > *Notes* > > Reflects the degree to which the text conforms to a reference corpus > given an algorithm which combines several classes of error type to > produce an aggregate rating. Higher values reflect poorer conformance. > > Phil Ritchie > > > ************************************************************ > This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and > intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they > are addressed. If you have received this email in error please notify > the sender immediately by e-mail. > > www.vistatec.com > ************************************************************ >
Received on Friday, 14 December 2012 09:46:19 UTC