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Machine Translation Models are Zero-Shot Detectors of Translation Direction

An unsupervised method for detecting translation direction leverages the simplification effect in translationese, achieving high accuracy in document-level classification for both machine and human translations.

Year
2024
Venue
arXiv 2024
Authors
3
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arxiv.org/abs/2401.06769v3ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

Detecting the translation direction of parallel text has applications for machine translation training and evaluation, but also has forensic applications such as resolving plagiarism or forgery allegations. In this work, we explore an unsupervised approach to translation direction detection based on the simple hypothesis that $p(\text{translation}|\text{original})>p(\text{original}|\text{translation})$, motivated by the well-known simplification effect in translationese or machine-translationese. In experiments with massively multilingual machine translation models across 20 translation directions, we confirm the effectiveness of the approach for high-resource language pairs, achieving document-level accuracies of 82--96% for NMT-produced translations, and 60--81% for human translations, depending on the model used. Code and demo are available at https://github.com/ZurichNLP/translation-direction-detection

Authors

3