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Main Authors: Jiménez-Crespo, Miguel A., Rodriguez, Stephanie, Losa, Alejandro Jaume
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.19234
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author Jiménez-Crespo, Miguel A.
Rodriguez, Stephanie
Losa, Alejandro Jaume
author_facet Jiménez-Crespo, Miguel A.
Rodriguez, Stephanie
Losa, Alejandro Jaume
contents The rapid emergence of AI technologies is reshaping translation practices and theory across the board. This paper deals with the impact of AI in language access. This area is characterized by the need to serve broad and diverse user populations, within a context where efficiency and access are shaped by legal mandates, ethical and commercial tensions, and safety concerns. This paper reports on the attitudes and perceptions of language access managers towards the AI and the human value in the AI age. Methodologically, this paper presents an analysis of a subset of a broader study on language access and technology, specifically a qualitative thematic analysis of ten semi-structured interviews with language access managers in the USA working in healthcare, court, public service and local government contexts. The results indicate that language access managers show conditional optimism towards the inevitable AI implementations, are strongly risk aware, and deeply committed to the human value and human oversight of AI implementations and output.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_19234
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle AI Technologies in Language Access: Attitudes Towards AI and the Human Value of Language Access Managers
Jiménez-Crespo, Miguel A.
Rodriguez, Stephanie
Losa, Alejandro Jaume
Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
91
A.1; K.4
The rapid emergence of AI technologies is reshaping translation practices and theory across the board. This paper deals with the impact of AI in language access. This area is characterized by the need to serve broad and diverse user populations, within a context where efficiency and access are shaped by legal mandates, ethical and commercial tensions, and safety concerns. This paper reports on the attitudes and perceptions of language access managers towards the AI and the human value in the AI age. Methodologically, this paper presents an analysis of a subset of a broader study on language access and technology, specifically a qualitative thematic analysis of ten semi-structured interviews with language access managers in the USA working in healthcare, court, public service and local government contexts. The results indicate that language access managers show conditional optimism towards the inevitable AI implementations, are strongly risk aware, and deeply committed to the human value and human oversight of AI implementations and output.
title AI Technologies in Language Access: Attitudes Towards AI and the Human Value of Language Access Managers
topic Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
91
A.1; K.4
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.19234