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1
Crowdsourcing and Aggregating Nested Markable Annotations
Madge, Chris; Yu, Juntao; Chamberlain, Jon. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019
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2
Multilingual and cross-lingual graded lexical entailment
Glavaš, Goran; Vulić, Ivan; Ponzetto, Simone Paolo. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019
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3
How to (properly) evaluate cross-lingual word embeddings: On strong baselines, comparative analyses, and some misconceptions
Glavaš, Goran; Litschko, Robert; Ruder, Sebastian. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019
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4
Generalized tuning of distributional word vectors for monolingual and cross-lingual lexical entailment
Vulić, Ivan; Glavaš, Goran. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2019
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5
Multimodal Dialogue Management for Multiparty Interaction with Infants ...
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6
ScoutBot: A Dialogue System for Collaborative Navigation ...
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7
Computational approaches to dialogue
In: The Routledge handbook of language and dialogue (London, 2017), p. 143-161
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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8
Prediction and Realisation of Conversational Characteristics by Utilising Spontaneous Speech for Unit Selection
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9
Towards an ISO Standard for Dialogue Act Annotation
In: Seventh conference on International Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'10) ; https://hal.inria.fr/inria-00544997 ; Seventh conference on International Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'10), May 2010, La Valette, Malta (2010)
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10
Natural Language Processing for Joint Fire Observer Training
In: DTIC (2010)
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11
Natural Language Dialogue Architectures for Tactical Questioning Characters
In: DTIC (2008)
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12
Coherence of Off-Topic Responses for a Virtual Character
In: DTIC (2008)
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13
Contribution tracking: participating in task-oriented dialogue under uncertainty
DeVault, David. - 2008
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14
The Error Is the Clue: Breakdown In Human-Machine Interaction
In: DTIC (2006)
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15
Ideas on Multi-layer Dialogue Management for Multi-party, Multi-conversation, Multi-modal Communication (Extended Abstract of Invited Talk)
In: DTIC (2006)
Abstract: Most current dialogue systems concern only a short dialogue between a single system and single user, focused on a single task. On the other hand, the full spectrum of communication between interacting agents includes cases in which multiple segments of conversation can be interleaved with other, sometimes unrelated actions and events (e.g., a cocktail party). Language use in the Mission Rehearsal Exercise Project at ICT (Swartout, Hill, Gratch, Johnson, Kyriakakis, Labore, Lindheim, Marsella, Miraglia, Moore, Morie, Rickel, Thiebaux, Tuch, Whitney and Douglas 2001) falls between these two extremes, having one main purpose (Army platoon-level leadership training using virtual reality and virtual humans), but multiple characters, each with its own goals, interests, and capabilities. In this scenario, multiple characters must engage in dialogue, both with each other and with the human trainee. Moreover, multiple conversations are involved, each with a distinct context for interpretation. The conversations are also multimodal in two senses. First, communication can occur not just with speech, but also with visual media including gesture and gaze of artificial characters, and secondly different media sets must be used for different communications, e.g., face-to-face communication for some characters and radio communication for others who are not physically co-present. We present here a multiple layer approach towards modelling and managing these complexities, including who is accessible for conversation, paying attention, involved in a conversation, as well as turn-taking, initiative, grounding, and higher-level dialogue functions. The method will follow that used in the Trindi project, where one specifies an information state, and "dialogue moves" representing input and output, as well as associated updates to information state.
Keyword: *COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS; *MILITARY EXERCISES; *MRE(MISSION REHEARSAL EXERCISE); *MULTIMODE; COMMUNICATION AND RADIO SYSTEMS; DIALOGUE MANAGEMENT; Linguistics; Military Operations; MULTI-CONVERSATION; MULTI-LAYER; MULTI-PARTY; MULTICHANNEL COMMUNICATIONS; MULTIPLE OPERATION; Radio Communications; SOCIAL COMMUNICATION; Strategy and Tactics; VIRTUAL REALITY; VISUAL PERCEPTION; VOICE COMMUNICATIONS
URL: http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA459156
http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA459156
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16
Dealing with Out of Domain Questions in Virtual Characters
In: DTIC (2006)
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17
Issues in Corpus Development for Multi-Party Multi-Modal Task-Oriented Dialogue
In: DTIC (2006)
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18
Evaluation of Transcription and Annotation Tools for a Multi-Modal, Multi-Party Dialogue Corpus
In: DTIC (2004)
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19
Issues in Multiparty Dialogues
Traum,David. - 2004
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20
Conversation Acts in Task-Oriented Spoken Dialogue
Hinkelman, Elizabeth Ann (1963 - ); Traum, David R. (1963 - ). - : University of Rochester. Computer Science Department., 2004
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