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Land Capability in the Lake Travis Vicinity, Texas A Practical Guide for the Use of Geologic and Engineering Data
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How Push-To-Talk Makes Talk Less Pushy
This paper presents an exploratory study of college-age students using
two-way, push-to-talk cellular radios. We describe the observed and reported
use of cellular radio by the participants. We discuss how the half-duplex,
lightweight cellular radio communication was associated with reduced
interactional commitment, which meant the cellular radios could be used for a
wide range of conversation styles. One such style, intermittent conversation,
is characterized by response delays. Intermittent conversation is surprising in
an audio medium, since it is typically associated with textual media such as
instant messaging. We present design implications of our findings.Comment: 10 page
Making Space for Stories: Ambiguity in the Design of Personal Communication Systems
Pervasive personal communication technologies offer the potential for
important social benefits for individual users, but also the potential for
significant social difficulties and costs. In research on face-to-face social
interaction, ambiguity is often identified as an important resource for
resolving social difficulties. In this paper, we discuss two design cases of
personal communication systems, one based on fieldwork of a commercial system
and another based on an unrealized design concept. The cases illustrate how
user behavior concerning a particular social difficulty, unexplained
unresponsiveness, can be influenced by technological issues that result in
interactional ambiguity. The cases also highlight the need to balance the
utility of ambiguity against the utility of usability and communicative
clarity.Comment: 10 page
Detecting User Engagement in Everyday Conversations
This paper presents a novel application of speech emotion recognition:
estimation of the level of conversational engagement between users of a voice
communication system. We begin by using machine learning techniques, such as
the support vector machine (SVM), to classify users' emotions as expressed in
individual utterances. However, this alone fails to model the temporal and
interactive aspects of conversational engagement. We therefore propose the use
of a multilevel structure based on coupled hidden Markov models (HMM) to
estimate engagement levels in continuous natural speech. The first level is
comprised of SVM-based classifiers that recognize emotional states, which could
be (e.g.) discrete emotion types or arousal/valence levels. A high-level HMM
then uses these emotional states as input, estimating users' engagement in
conversation by decoding the internal states of the HMM. We report experimental
results obtained by applying our algorithms to the LDC Emotional Prosody and
CallFriend speech corpora.Comment: 4 pages (A4), 1 figure (EPS
Time lower bounds for nonadaptive turnstile streaming algorithms
We say a turnstile streaming algorithm is "non-adaptive" if, during updates,
the memory cells written and read depend only on the index being updated and
random coins tossed at the beginning of the stream (and not on the memory
contents of the algorithm). Memory cells read during queries may be decided
upon adaptively. All known turnstile streaming algorithms in the literature are
non-adaptive.
We prove the first non-trivial update time lower bounds for both randomized
and deterministic turnstile streaming algorithms, which hold when the
algorithms are non-adaptive. While there has been abundant success in proving
space lower bounds, there have been no non-trivial update time lower bounds in
the turnstile model. Our lower bounds hold against classically studied problems
such as heavy hitters, point query, entropy estimation, and moment estimation.
In some cases of deterministic algorithms, our lower bounds nearly match known
upper bounds
The Guidebook, the Friend, and the Room: Visitor Experience in a Historic House
In this paper, we describe an electronic guidebook prototype and report on a
study of its use in a historic house. Supported by mechanisms in the guidebook,
visitors constructed experiences that had a high degree of interaction with
three entities: the guidebook, their companions, and the house and its
contents. For example, we found that most visitors played audio descriptions
played through speakers (rather than using headphones or reading textual
descriptions) to facilitate communication with their companions
The ECB should focus on the threat of deflation rather than maintaining austerity
The European Central Bank will hold its latest policy meeting today. Ahead of the meeting, David Woodruff writes that while growth has resumed in the Eurozone, there are still serious problems across the single currency area, with unemployment at exceptionally high levels in several countries. He argues that the ECB’s primary focus should be on preventing deflation, and that it should look beyond a narrow preoccupation with deficit reduction and austerity policies
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