Reference:
Vocabulary Navigation Made Easier
Sonya Nikolova, Xiaojuan Ma, Marilyn Tremaine, Perry Cook
IUI '10
Summary:
There are many reasons to search for words in an electronic dictionary, but it is not always easy to find the word that you're looking for. This is especially true for people with aphasia, a cognitive disorder that results in afflicted persons being able to remember the correct words to express their thoughts. The visual vocabulary for aphasia (or ViVA) attempts to improve word finding by using word associasion measures, human judgements of evocation, vocabulary usage statistics, and a large-scale lexical database. It works through associations of words. For example, if someone needed to find the word milk, they would choose the kitchen category, then go through fridge, dairy, and finally arrive at milk.

Discussion:
This has a real potential to be an excellent tool to assisting individuals with weak skills in any given language. I typically use a dictionary when I want to double check the spelling of a word, but in the case of a foreign language where there is no readily available english-to-foreign resource this system would be able to bridge the gap nicely. That doesn't make this a perfect system, however. From what I understand, this provides little to no grammar context, nor does it teach pronunciation. Still, in this case the good outweighs the bad.
This system does sound like it could be useful. It's nice to see systems being implemented to help people.
ReplyDeleteI agree, I think this system could be very useful. To me, it sounded like it's more for trying to find a specific word when you already know its context instead of using it for grammar or pronunciation purposes.
ReplyDeleteI think this would be great for those learning a new language. It seems really useful to navigate in this way.
ReplyDeleteIf I ever find myself in a foreign country where finding English speakers is rare, I would love to have something like this to help me get around and function.
ReplyDelete