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Dyslexia and dying languages - there's an app for that

Learning-impaired kids and lost languages benefit from alumna's technology
August 28, 2012
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By Louise Morgan


What do dyslexia in children and endangered languages have in common? Concordia graduate Gina Cook combines her expertise in linguistics and computer programming to tackle both challenges — and more. Her company, iLanguage Lab, develops Android-tablet apps with varied language-related functions to help the community.

In August, Cook headed to Patzun, Guatemala, to launch iField, a cloud-based app for field linguists that records and codes primary language data both on- and off-line.

“We’re using technology to empower minority language speakers. iField provides a bridge that enables software to work with their language,” she says. There are clear benefits when it comes to performing effective computer-based searches.

Gina Cook with Urdu language consultant Faryal Abbasi
Gina Cook (right) with Urdu language consultant Faryal Abbasi in Karachi, Pakistan, 2005 | Photo by Gina Cook

Because many native languages in the Americas use a single word to convey what is expressed in an entire English sentence, searching using a native word brings up very limited results, since it’s so specific. Knowing this, native-language speakers naturally switch to English or Spanish search terms to get more results.

Unlike software designed to work with English, iField extracts meaningful sequences of letters – called morphemes.

“With iField, you can cut up the words into morphemes and use those to create a search index instead of full words. Indexing morphemes means you get more and better search results while exponentially reducing search time,” explains Cook. “Adaptive software might make an important difference to maintaining minority languages in the next 10 years.”

Facilitating the use of native languages not only helps to preserve cultural communities, but also promotes bilingualism.

“Bilingualism creates healthy brains and communities. Alzheimer’s disease has been shown to start five years later in bilingual (people),” says Cook, who speaks five languages fluently.

The initiative is part of a collaborative project with researchers at McGill University and the University of California, Santa Cruz. The larger project aims to preserve minority Mayan languages by empowering community members to speak and document their native language.

Closer to home, iLanguage Lab was selected to develop an app for dyslexia diagnosis among pre-literate children for Quebec’s education ministry. The dyslexia test comprises four interactive touch-tablet games for kids and is part of a larger project being conducted by researchers from McGill and Université de Montréal. They have been working on the project for five years and the app will be launched in September.

“Kids think it’s a game, but in reality, it’s a test that can help determine whether they might have dyslexia,” Cook says. “We’ll be working with school boards to get it into schools. It’s a great app for us because it demonstrates how research in theoretical linguistics can help the community.”

Cook launched iLanguage Lab in April 2011 to build software to automate data entry. “It’s a very basic concept, but makes a world of difference in linguistics, a field of study which can require navigating huge amounts of data,” she says.

Recognizing talent at Concordia, Cook has hired several students and recent graduates, including interns with linguistics and software engineering backgrounds. With their help, iLanguage Lab launched an Android-based bilingual aphasia test. “We automated an existing test for the language disorder to collect data for researchers and clinicians.” 

Cook thrives on solving problems using technology. Her skills were recognized at last December’s Random Hacks of Kindness Hackathon, where her team won the best-use-of-technology award for building an Android app to determine the safety of drinking water.

The 32-year-old is a two-time Concordia graduate and holds a BA in linguistics and a graduate diploma in computer science with a specialization in computational linguistics. Cook was president of Concordia’s Linguistics Student Association for two years.

“I’m a very proud Concordia graduate,” Cook says. “The university has been very important in my life. Since Concordia does not offer a graduate program in linguistics, undergraduate students are treated with the attention usually invested in grad students.”

Her outstanding work at Concordia won her a full graduate scholarship at the University of Delaware, where she met Emmy Cathcart, iLanguage Lab’s field linguist, who attests to the difference Concordia makes.

“Gina is more proactive, takes greater initiative. Not only does she have linguistics and programming skills, she has this gung-ho attitude to start her own company. She inspires me,” Cathcart says.

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