IntelligenceComputer-based methodology for cultural intelligence and security

Published 3 July 2012

Cultural differences are a major challenge facing intelligence agencies, researchers from Israel and the United States have developed computer-based methodology to improve knowledge, apply data, and better decipher these nuances and biases

While identifying cultural differences is a major challenge facing intelligence agencies, researchers from Israel and the United States have developed computer-based methodology to improve knowledge, apply data, and better decipher these nuances and biases.

An American Associates, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev release reports that this new methodology will be presented in a paper titled “Can Computers Help Us to Better Understand Different Cultures?” by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) of Beer-Sheva, Israel and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) at the 2012 European Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference in August.

Unlike other forms of intelligence which rely heavily on advanced technologies to intercept and interpret information, cultural intelligence has traditionally been the province of human experts and evaluations.

At the conference, BGU Department of Education chair Professor Yair Neuman and Professor Newton Howard of MIT will discuss this novel methodology, which paradoxically uses the shortcomings of automatic machine translation — the translation of text from one language to another — to improve cultural understanding and intelligence.

This methodology seeks to identify our own shortcomings in understanding various cultures, while producing surprising results,” Neuman explains.  “For instance, it was found that historic American political speeches understood from the perspective of the Arab language were wrongly perceived as sentimental and emotionally loaded compared to the original meaning.  By identifying these biases, we can better understand and adjust our thinking.”

The researchers add that this methodology is a promising new tool for computer-based cultural intelligence technology, but is currently only in the beginning stages of its development.