NLP
Natural Language Processing
TL;DR
Teaching computers to understand human language — sarcasm, slang, and all. It's why Siri sometimes gets you and sometimes thinks you said something completely unhinged.
The Plain English Version
You know how you can say "that's sick" and your friend knows you mean "that's awesome" and not "that's diseased"? Context, tone, slang — your brain handles all of that automatically. Computers? Not so much.
Natural Language Processing (NLP) is the field of AI dedicated to helping computers understand, interpret, and generate human language. Not computer language with its precise syntax and brackets — messy, ambiguous, sometimes-contradictory HUMAN language. The kind where "I didn't say she stole my money" means something different depending on which word you emphasize.
Every time you talk to Siri, every time Google translates a webpage, every time Gmail suggests how to finish your sentence — that's NLP. It's the reason ChatGPT can understand your rambling question and give you a coherent answer. Before NLP got good, talking to a computer was like talking to that one friend who takes everything literally.
Why Should You Care?
Because NLP is the technology that made AI feel accessible to normal people. You don't need to learn to code to use ChatGPT — you just talk to it. That's NLP making it possible. Understanding NLP helps you understand why AI is sometimes brilliant and sometimes completely misses the point of what you said.
The Nerd Version (if you dare)
NLP combines computational linguistics with machine learning and deep learning to process and analyze natural language data. Key tasks include tokenization, part-of-speech tagging, named entity recognition, sentiment analysis, machine translation, and text generation. Modern NLP is dominated by transformer-based models (BERT, GPT) that use self-attention mechanisms to capture contextual relationships in text.
Related terms
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