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Turn-taking and Disfluencies

Turn-taking and Disfluencies. Julia Hirschberg CS 4706. Today. Turn-taking behaviors Conversational Analysis Importance in real systems Disfluencies How to model? Detect? Role in human-human interaction Importance in real systems?. Turn-taking. Expected patterns of behavior

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Turn-taking and Disfluencies

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  1. Turn-taking and Disfluencies Julia Hirschberg CS 4706

  2. Today • Turn-taking behaviors • Conversational Analysis • Importance in real systems • Disfluencies • How to model? Detect? • Role in human-human interaction • Importance in real systems?

  3. Turn-taking • Expected patterns of behavior • Deviation is significant • How do we find the patterns? • Ordinary conversation • Telephone talk • Meetings • Email? • Who looks for these?

  4. Terminology • Adjacency pairs • Preference • Pre-sequence • Repair • Examples: • Telephone openings, closings • Broadcasts

  5. Could this be useful when we build SDS? • What do we expect to hear? • What should we produce?

  6. Auditory Cues to Turn-Taking • M. Schegloff “Reflections on studying prosody in talk-in-interaction, ” Language and Speech 41, 1999. (Michael Mu.) • H. Koiso et al ‘99 “An analysis of turn-taking and backchannels based on prosodic and syntactic features…,” Language and Speech 41, 1999. (Sarah)

  7. Disfluencies and Self-Repairs • Are these just ‘noise’? • For people • S. Brennan & M. Williams, “The Feeling of Another’s Knowing,” J Memory and Language 34, 1995. (Judd) • S. Brennan & Schober, “How listeners compensate for disfluencies in spontaneous speech,” J Memory and Language 44, 2001. (Aron) • For parsers • For speech recognizers

  8. Hindle ’83: Finding the Edit Signal • If we have it, can we ‘repair’ the self-repair automatically? • Builds a correcting parser, Fidditch, for spontaneous speech • Given a string with an edit signal marked, produces a ‘repaired’ version I was * I am really annoyed • If X1 * X2 are similar linguistic elements separated by an edit signal, replace X1 w/X2

  9. What does it mean to be the same • Same surface string Well if they’d * if they’d… • Same category I was just that * the kind of guy… • Same constituent I thinkthat you get * it’s more strict in Catholic schools • Restarts are completely different… I just think * Do you want something to eat?

  10. Bear et al ’92: Detecting and Correcting Self-Repairs • Use multiple knowledge sources but not edit signal • Lexical pattern matching • Parsing failure + pattern matching + re-parsing • Acoustic information: pause, peak F0, • Cue words: well, no • Fragments

  11. But…is there an edit signal?

  12. RIM Model of Self-Repairs (Nakatani & Hirschberg ’94) • ATIS corpus • 6414 turns with 346 (5.4%) repairs, 122 speakers • Hand-labeled for repairs and prosodic features • Findings: • Reparanda: 73% end in fragments, 30% in glottalization, co-articulatory gestures • DI: pausal duration differs significantly from fluent boundaries,small increase in f0 and amplitude

  13. Does it identify self-repairs reliably? • CART prediction: 86% precision, 91% recall • Duration of interval, presence of fragment, pause filler, p.o.s., lexical matching across DI • Are there edit signals?

  14. Next Week • Spoken Dialogue Systems • Andy, David and Vera reporting

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