Saqer A. Almarri

143 Followers
121 Following
706 Posts
I do translation studies, gender studies and so on. (primarily revolving around Arabic, and Islam-related genres) he/they
Bookwyrm:@[email protected]
Curious: how many of you academics are in institutions that have started dealing with the problem of disproportionate LLM usage in application documents: recommendation letters, college essays, cover letters, etc. I want to know how many of us are thinking about how to minimize the required documents for these things to avoid the inundation of generated text?
I’m considering assigning the first 10 minutes of Disco Elysium and maybe some of Celeste gameplay videos in a unit on the mind for a syllabus. I’m not sure I can assign more but I’m trying to get some game writing examples into the syllabus. And I’m hoping this would be exciting for people.

Why yes, I'm at work right now preparing to show my student research assistant some of Julia Silge's R code for topic modeling the Spice Girls because, you know, we need to replicate it for some classical Arabic stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2i0Cu8MMGRc

Topic modeling for Spice Girls lyrics

YouTube
Folks, does anyone use a photo manager or catalog that allows for annotations and metadata? I'm thinking something like Calibre or Zotero but for images. How do art historians do it?
Random last sentence on a text I read today: "I here conclude my introductory remarks to the talk I will now not finally deliver"
@NPV In the humanities it's more like 3-9 months until you hear back at all.
@E_Mondragon I can't lie: I've been hoping for the demise of the "letter of recommendation" genre for academic job applications, and I am hoping LLMs will be the reason recruitment committees will finally abandon it, because the great disparity of what the letters look like depending on the region it was written in wasn't enough to kill off the genre.
@Stoori I think technology caused a hiccup in the complexifying processes, but it caught up: just see all the font varieties out there, and the ligatures that people use.

Reading this piece on Chinese script becoming more complex over time, and off what I know of the history of the Arabic script, I would think it applies. It has gotten more complex over time (the flattening due to shitty technology is a blip of an exception)

https://doi.org/10.1162/opmi_a_00064

Simplification Is Not Dominant in the Evolution of Chinese Characters

Abstract. Linguistic systems are hypothesised to be shaped by pressures towards communicative efficiency that drive processes of simplification. A longstanding illustration of this idea is the claim that Chinese characters have progressively simplified over time. Here we test this claim by analyzing a dataset with more than half a million images of Chinese characters spanning more than 3,000 years of recorded history. We find no consistent evidence of simplification through time, and contrary to popular belief we find that modern Chinese characters are higher in visual complexity than their earliest known counterparts. One plausible explanation for our findings is that simplicity trades off with distinctiveness, and that characters have become less simple because of pressures towards distinctiveness. Our findings are therefore compatible with functional accounts of language but highlight the diverse and sometimes counterintuitive ways in which linguistic systems are shaped by pressures for communicative efficiency.

MIT Press

Today in things I read and agree with: "Currently, translation studies cannot claim the name 'translation studies' because it does not study all forms of translation, only human ones." from Kobus Marais's "Tom, Dick, and Harry, as well as Fido, and Puss in Boots are Translators".

I mean I've agreed with this for ~5ish years now... Anyways I think I know how I'll deal with the references to the gender of animals in all the literature I've been reading.