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5th SIGDIAL Workshop 2004: Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
- Michael Strube, Candy L. Sidner:
Proceedings of the SIGDIAL 2004 Workshop, The 5th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue, April 30 - May 1, 2004, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. The Association for Computer Linguistics 2004, ISBN 1-932432-27-2 - Curry I. Guinn, Robert C. Hubal, Geoffrey A. Frank, Henry Schwetzke, James Zimmer, Sarah Backus, Robin R. Deterding, Michael W. Link, Polly P. Armsby, Rachel Caspar, Laura Flicker, Wendy Visscher, Amanda Meehan, Harvey Zelon:
Usability and Acceptability Studies of Conversational Virtual Human Technology. 1-8 - Nathanael Chambers, James F. Allen:
Stochastic Language Generation in a Dialogue System: Toward a Domain Independent Generator. 9-18 - Kerry Robinson, David Horowitz, Emilio Bobadilla, Mark Lascelles, Ana Suárez:
Conversational Dialogue Management in the FASiL project. 19-22 - Joakim Gustafson, Linda Bell, Johan Boye, Anders Lindström, Mats Wirén:
The NICE Fairy-tale Game System. 23-26 - Malte Gabsdil:
Combining Acoustic Confidences and Pragmatic Plausibility for Classifying Spoken Chess Move Instructions. 27-30 - Stefan W. Hamerich, Volker Schubert, Volker Schless, Ricardo de Córdoba, José M. Pardo, Luis Fernando D'Haro, Basilis Kladis, Otilia Kocsis, Stefan Igel:
Semi-Automatic Generation of Dialogue Applications in the GEMINI Project. 31-34 - Dimitra Tsovaltzi, Elena Karagjosova:
A View on Dialogue Move Taxonomies for Tutorial Dialogues. 35-38 - Olga Gerassimenko, Tiit Hennoste, Mare Koit, Andriela Rääbis:
Other-Initiated Self-Repairs in Estonian Information Dialogues: Solving Communication Problems in Cooperation. 39-42 - Kavita Thomas:
But What Do They Mean? An Exploration Into the Range of Cross-Turn Expectations Denied by "But". 43-46 - Prateek Jain, Manav Ratan Mital, Sumit Kumar, Amitabha Mukerjee, Achla M. Raina:
Anaphora Resolution in Multi-Person Dialogues. 47-50 - Cassandre Cresswell, Elsi Kaiser:
The Importance of Discourse Context for Statistical Natural Language Generation. 51-54 - Berenike Loos, Robert Porzel:
Resolution of Lexical Ambiguities in Spoken Dialogue System. 55-62 - Sandrine Zufferey, Andrei Popescu-Belis:
Towards Automatic Identification of Discourse Markers in Dialogs: The Case of Like. 63-71 - Giuseppe Di Fabbrizio, Gökhan Tür, Dilek Hakkani-Tür:
Bootstrapping Spoken Dialog Systems with Data Reuse. 72-80 - Stefanie Tomko, Roni Rosenfeld
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Speech Graffiti Habitability: What Do Users Really Say? 81-84 - Karen Ward, Tasha Hollingsed, Javier A. Aldaz Salmon:
Acknowledgment Use with Synthesized and Recorded Prompts. 85-88 - Natasa Jovanovic, Rieks op den Akker:
Towards Automatic Addressee Identification in Multi-party Dialogues. 89-92 - Gina-Anne Levow:
Prosodic Cues to Discourse Segment Boundaries in Human-Computer Dialogue. 93-96 - Elizabeth Shriberg, Rajdip Dhillon, Sonali Bhagat, Jeremy Ang, Hannah Carvey:
The ICSI Meeting Recorder Dialog Act (MRDA) Corpus. 97-100 - Justine Cassell:
Dialogue Systems that Can Handle Face-to-Face Joint Reference to Actions in Space. 101 - Christian Raymond, Frédéric Béchet, Renato De Mori, Géraldine Damnati:
On the Use of Confidence for Statistical Decision in Dialogue Strategies. 102-107 - Livia Polanyi, Chris Culy, Martin van den Berg, Gian Lorenzo Thione, David D. Ahn:
A Rule Based Approach to Discourse Parsing. 108-117 - Marco Carbone, Ya'akov Gal, Stuart M. Shieber, Barbara J. Grosz:
Unifying Annotated Discourse Hierarchies to Create a Gold Standard. 118-126 - Laurence Danlos:
Discourse Dependency Structures as Constrained DAGs. 127-135 - David Schlangen:
Causes and Strategies for Requesting Clarification in Dialogue. 136-143 - Diane J. Litman, Kate Forbes-Riley:
Annotating Student Emotional States in Spoken Tutoring Dialogues. 144-153 - Massimo Poesio:
The MATE/GNOME Proposals for Anaphoric Annotation, Revisited. 154-162 - Alexander Clark, Andrei Popescu-Belis:
Multi-level Dialogue Act Tags. 163-170

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