The Routledge Handbook of Interpreting, Technology and AI
Sabine Braun editor Elena Davitti editor Tomasz Korybski editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:23rd May '25
£230.00
This title is due to be published on 23rd May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the history, development, use and study of the evolving relationship between interpreting and technology, addressing the challenges and opportunities brought by advances in AI and digital tools.
Encompassing a variety of methods, systems and devices applied to interpreting as a field of practice as well as a study discipline, this volume presents a synthesis of current thinking on the topic and an understanding of how technology alters, shapes, and enables the interpreting task. The handbook examines how interpreting has evolved through the integration of both purpose-built and adapted technologies that support, automate or even replace (human) interpreting tasks and offers insights into their ethical, practical and socio-economic implications. Addressing both signed and spoken language interpreting technologies, as well as technologies for language access and media accessibility, the book draws together expertise from varied areas of study and illustrates overlapping aspects of research.
Authored by a range of practicing interpreters and academics from across five continents, this is the essential guide to interpreting and technology for both advanced students and researchers of interpreting and professional interpreters.
“Amid a plethora of handbooks, this volume is particularly timely as a much-needed stock-taking of technological developments that have been and will be shaping the way interpreting is practiced and future technology-using professionals are educated to enable communication in a variety of settings.”
Franz Pöchhacker, University of Vienna, Austria
ISBN: 9780367513009
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
454 pages