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Buschmeier, Hendrik: Attentive Speaking. From Listener Feedback to Interactive Adaptation. 2018
Inhalt
Abstract
Acknowledgements
Preliminary Remarks
Speakers and listeners
Previously published material and co-authorship
1 Introduction
1.1 Context and motivation
1.2 Objective and scope
Listener state attribution
Interactive adaptation
Feedback elicitation
1.3 Overview
I Dialogue Coordination in the Human and the Machine
2 Communication, Dialogue, and Coordination
2.1 Understanding, misunderstanding, and non-understanding
2.1.1 Understanding
2.1.2 Strong and weak concepts of understanding
2.1.3 Non-understanding and misunderstanding
2.1.4 Ways out: Approaching understanding
2.2 Common ground and grounding
2.2.1 Grounding
2.2.2 Computational theories of grounding
2.3 Alignment, adaptation, and coordination
2.3.1 Interactive adaptation
2.3.2 Interactive alignment
2.3.3 Full common ground
2.3.4 Monitoring and adjustment
2.3.5 Minimal partner models
2.3.6 Intermediate summary
2.4 Reaching understanding with artificial conversational agents
2.5 Summary and conclusion
3 Communicative Feedback
3.1 On the origins of the concept of feedback in communication
3.2 Terminology
3.3 Form and structure of feedback signals
3.3.1 Short verbal/vocal feedback
3.3.2 Prosody and intonation of feedback
3.3.3 Embodied, non-verbal feedback
3.3.4 Intermediate summary: form
3.4 Meaning and function of listener feedback
3.4.1 Hierarchical relations
3.4.2 Polarity
3.4.3 Awareness and intentionality
3.5 Placement and timing
3.6 Communicative feedback in artificial conversational agents
3.7 Summary and conclusion
II A Computational Model of Attentive Speaking
4 Interactional Intelligence for Attentive Speaking
5 Mental State Attribution Based on Communicative Listener Feedback
5.1 Introduction
5.2 A causal model of the interaction
5.3 The attributed listener state (ALS)
5.4 Feedback and attributed listener state
5.5 Interpreting listener feedback in context
5.6 Feedback and grounding
5.7 Interpreting listener feedback in an evolving context
5.7.1 Dynamic minimal mentalising
5.7.2 Worked example
5.7.3 Discourse structure and belief state evolution
5.8 Related work
5.9 Discussion
5.10 Summary
6 Interactive Adaptation
6.1 Levels and mechanisms of adaptation
6.2 Adaptive natural language generation
6.2.1 The SPUD microplanning framework
6.2.2 Incremental generation with SPUD_inc
Generation example
Discussion
6.2.3 Adaptive Generation in SPUD_ia
6.2.4 Adaptation mechanisms in SPUD_ia
Verbosity
Redundancy
6.3 Adaptive incremental speech synthesis and behaviour realisation
6.4 Summary and discussion
7 Feedback Elicitation
7.1 Seeking evidence of understanding
7.2 Information needs and feedback requests
7.3 Criteria for eliciting feedback
7.4 Eliciting feedback
7.5 Summary and conclusion
III Evaluation
8 Bringing it Together: An Attentive Speaker Agent
8.1 Overall model and architecture
8.2 Incremental processing
8.2.1 Incremental processing for artificial conversational agents
8.2.2 The IU-model
8.3 Behaviour planning and realisation
8.3.1 The SAIBA-architecture for behaviour generation
8.3.2 Real-time generation of multimodal behaviour
8.3.3 Behaviour generation for attentive speaking
8.3.4 Dialogue Engine
8.3.5 Natural language generation with SPUD_ia
8.3.6 Gaze behaviour
8.4 Attributed Listener State
8.4.1 Collecting evidence
8.4.2 Processing evidence
8.4.3 A note recognising listener feedback signals
8.5 Personal calendar assistant scenario
8.6 Summary
9 Evaluation of the Attentive Speaker Agent
9.1 Evaluating artificial conversational agents
9.2 Evaluation strategy and general hypotheses
9.3 Materials and methods
9.3.1 Objective metrics and variables
9.3.2 Subjective metrics and variables
9.3.3 Experimental conditions
9.3.4 Setup
9.3.5 The Wizard-of-Oz
9.3.6 Procedure
9.4 Participants
9.5 Analysis and results
9.5.1 Participants' feedback behaviour
Annotation of participant's feedback signal
Do participants provide natural feedback in human–agent interaction?
Does the agent's behaviour influence participants' feedback rate?
Does participants' feedback rate change over time?
Do participants (just) respond to feedback cues?
Intermediate summary
9.5.2 Objective quality of the interaction
Analysing costs: interaction durations
Analysing costs: repetitions
Intermediate summary: Costs
Analysing performance: understanding in terms of recall
Intermediate summary: Performance
Efficiency: Recall score versus duration or repetition
Intermediate summary: Efficiency
9.5.3 Subjective quality of the interaction
The agent's communicative competence (Q1–Q3)
Q1
Q2
Q3
The agent's attentive speaking capabilities (Q4–Q10)
Q4
Q5
Q6
Q7
Q8
Q9
Q10
The agent's helpfulness (Q11–Q14)
Q11
Q12
Q13
Q14
The agent's naturalness (Q15–Q17)
Q15
Q16
Q17
Perception of the task and study
Q18
Q19
Q20
Intermediate summary
9.6 General discussion
Overall conclusion
Future work
10 Conclusion
10.1 Summary
10.2 Contributions and implications
Communicative listener feedback
Incremental processing in conversational agents
Grounding and interactive adaptation
Intelligent virtual agents
Interactional intelligence and dialogue coordination
10.3 Limitations and future research directions
Appendices
A Model Parametrisation from Implicit Representation
A.1 Model parametrisation
A.2 The CPT generation algorithm
A.3 Example – Generating a CPT for Pr(U | P, FB)
B Study Materials
B.1 Short written instructions
B.2 Detailed oral instructions
Bibliography
Accompanying Resources
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