565 research outputs found

    The State of Speech in HCI: Trends, Themes and Challenges

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    Usefulness, localizability, humanness, and language-benefit: additional evaluation criteria for natural language dialogue systems

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    Human–computer dialogue systems interact with human users using natural language. We used the ALICE/AIML chatbot architecture as a platform to develop a range of chatbots covering different languages, genres, text-types, and user-groups, to illustrate qualitative aspects of natural language dialogue system evaluation. We present some of the different evaluation techniques used in natural language dialogue systems, including black box and glass box, comparative, quantitative, and qualitative evaluation. Four aspects of NLP dialogue system evaluation are often overlooked: “usefulness” in terms of a user’s qualitative needs, “localizability” to new genres and languages, “humanness” or “naturalness” compared to human–human dialogues, and “language benefit” compared to alternative interfaces. We illustrated these aspects with respect to our work on machine-learnt chatbot dialogue systems; we believe these aspects are worthwhile in impressing potential new users and customers

    The Science and Art of Voice Interfaces

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    An Approach for Intention-Driven, Dialogue-Based Web Search

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    Web search engines facilitate the achievement of Web-mediated tasks, including information retrieval, Web page navigation, and online transactions. These tasks often involve goals that pertain to multiple topics, or domains. Current search engines are not suitable for satisfying complex, multi-domain needs due to their lack of interactivity and knowledge. This thesis presents a novel intention-driven, dialogue-based Web search approach that uncovers and combines users\u27 multi-domain goals to provide helpful virtual assistance. The intention discovery procedure uses a hierarchy of Partially Observable Markov Decision Process-based dialogue managers and a backing knowledge base to systematically explore the dialogue\u27s information space, probabilistically refining the perception of user goals. The search approach has been implemented in IDS, a search engine for online gift shopping. A usability study comparing IDS-based searching with Google-based searching found that the IDS-based approach takes significantly less time and effort, and results in higher user confidence in the retrieved results

    Social talk capabilities for dialogue systems

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    Small talk capabilities are an important but very challenging extension to dialogue systems. Small talk (or “social talk”) refers to a kind of conversation, which does not focus on the exchange of information, but on the negotiation of social roles and situations. The goal of this thesis is to provide knowledge, processes and structures that can be used by dialogue systems to satisfactorily participate in social conversations. For this purpose the thesis presents research in the areas of natural-language understanding, dialogue management and error handling. Nine new models of social talk based on a data analysis of small talk conversations are described. The functionally-motivated and content-abstract models can be used for small talk conversations on various topics. The basic elements of the models consist of dialogue acts for social talk newly developed on basis of social science theory. The thesis also presents some conversation strategies for the treatment of so-called “out-of-domain” (OoD) utterances that can be used to avoid errors in the input understanding of dialogue systems. Additionally, the thesis describes a new extension to dialogue management that flexibly manages interwoven dialogue threads. The small talk models as well as the strategies for handling OoD utterances are encoded as computational dialogue threads

    Social talk capabilities for dialogue systems

    Get PDF
    Small talk capabilities are an important but very challenging extension to dialogue systems. Small talk (or social talk) refers to a kind of conversation, which does not focus on the exchange of information, but on the negotiation of social roles and situations. The goal of this thesis is to provide knowledge, processes and structures that can be used by dialogue systems to satisfactorily participate in social conversations. For this purpose the thesis presents research in the areas of natural-language understanding, dialogue management and error handling. Nine new models of social talk based on a data analysis of small talk conversations are described. The functionally-motivated and content-abstract models can be used for small talk conversations on various topics. The basic elements of the models consist of dialogue acts for social talk newly developed on basis of social science theory. The thesis also presents some conversation strategies for the treatment of so-called out-of-domain (OoD) utterances that can be used to avoid errors in the input understanding of dialogue systems. Additionally, the thesis describes a new extension to dialogue management that flexibly manages interwoven dialogue threads. The small talk models as well as the strategies for handling OoD utterances are encoded as computational dialogue threads
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