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  2. Predictive text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predictive_text

    Predictive text is an input technology used where one key or button represents many letters, such as on the physical numeric keypads of mobile phones and in accessibility technologies. Each key press results in a prediction rather than repeatedly sequencing through the same group of "letters" it represents, in the same, invariable order.

  3. T9 (predictive text) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T9_(predictive_text)

    T9 (predictive text) Logo of T9. T9 is a predictive text technology for mobile phones (specifically those that contain a 3×4 numeric keypad), originally developed by Tegic Communications, now part of Nuance Communications. T9 stands for Text on 9 keys.[1] T9 was used on phones from Verizon, NEC, Nokia, Samsung Electronics, Siemens, Sony Mobile ...

  4. Language model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_model

    A language model is a probabilistic model of a natural language. [1] In 1980, the first significant statistical language model was proposed, and during the decade IBM performed ‘Shannon-style’ experiments, in which potential sources for language modeling improvement were identified by observing and analyzing the performance of human subjects in predicting or correcting text.

  5. Criticism of credit scoring systems in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_credit...

    Predictive scoring may be an established feature of the Information Age, but it should not continue without check. Meaningful accountability is essential for predictive systems that sort people into "wheat" and "chaff," "employable" and "unemployable," "poor candidates" and "hire away," and "prime" and "subprime" borrowers.

  6. Natural language understanding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_understanding

    The system needs a lexicon of the language and a parser and grammar rules to break sentences into an internal representation. The construction of a rich lexicon with a suitable ontology requires significant effort, e.g., the Wordnet lexicon required many person-years of effort. [27] The system also needs theory from semantics to guide the ...

  7. Natural language processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_processing

    Natural language processing (NLP) is an interdisciplinary subfield of computer science and artificial intelligence.It is primarily concerned with providing computers with the ability to process data encoded in natural language and is thus closely related to information retrieval, knowledge representation and computational linguistics, a subfield of linguistics.

  8. Distant reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distant_reading

    Distant reading is an approach in literary studies that applies computational methods to literary data, usually derived from large digital libraries, for the purposes of literary history and theory. While the term is collective, and is used to refer to a range of different computational methods of analysing literary data, similar approaches ...

  9. Autocomplete - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autocomplete

    Autocomplete. Autocomplete, or word completion, is a feature in which an application predicts the rest of a word a user is typing. In Android and iOS [1] smartphones, this is called predictive text. In graphical user interfaces, users can typically press the tab key to accept a suggestion or the down arrow key to accept one of several.