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Applications of distributed dialogue systems: The KTH Connector

Applications of distributed dialogue systems: The KTH Connector. Jens Edlund Anna Hjalmarsson Aalborg, November 10th, 2005. Why spoken interfaces?. Speech is good because it is Hands free Eyes free Intuitive – already known Robust – e.g. redundancy, grounding Flexible Responsive

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Applications of distributed dialogue systems: The KTH Connector

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  1. Applications of distributed dialogue systems:The KTH Connector Jens Edlund Anna Hjalmarsson Aalborg, November 10th, 2005

  2. Why spoken interfaces? Speech is good because it is • Hands free • Eyes free • Intuitive – already known • Robust – e.g. redundancy, grounding • Flexible • Responsive • Efficient • …

  3. What do they do? • Purpose • Problem solving • Information seeking • Transactions • Control • … • Initiative • System • User • Mixed • Modality • Multimodal (input and/or output) • Unimodal (input and/or output) • …

  4. What else do they do? Spoken interfaces often replace or complement existing automated interfaces, for example:

  5. Alternative interface systems • Speech is an alternative or substitute • Commonly built to be as good as or better than the corresponding system • Symmetry often required – what can be done with the original system should be doable with speech and vice versa

  6. These aspects are often not exploited much in alternative interface systems Why spoken interfaces? • Hands free • Eyes free • Intuitive – already known • Robust – e.g. redundancy, grounding • Flexible • Responsive • Efficient • … • Hands free • Eyes free • Intuitive – already known • Robust – e.g. redundancy, grounding • Flexible • Responsive • Efficient • …

  7. What metaphor to rely on? • The voice as an input device? • ”You may use your voice to order”From a travel booking instruction in Swedish • ”It didn’t give me any alternatives”From a post interview with call routing user • The computer as a human? • Problem: Turing test

  8. Summary • Speech can be used successfully as an alternative or complementary interface to other interfaces, particularly when hands and/or eyes are occupied, disabled, or otherwise impratcical to use • The advantages of speech promised by analogies to human-human communication may not be fully exploited in such domains

  9. The KTH Connector • Background • Domain • System

  10. Background: CHIL • CHIL: Computers in the Human Interaction Loop (EU funded, IP506909) • The dialogue system as an unobtrusive conversational partner in a group of humans

  11. A telephony based secretary Wide range of complexity • From answer phone…

  12. A telephony based secretary • …to meeting assistant

  13. Dialogue setup Multimodal, multiparty, system barge-in Multiparty telephony

  14. System highlights System may dial users Prosody enhanced endpointing System output is included in discourse model (incrementally)

  15. Research highlight: Responsiveness • When should we respond? • Turn yielding & turn holding cues: • Prosody • Gaze • …

  16. Research highlight: Incrementality • When can we respond? • After a ”long enough” silence? • At some semantic or syntactic completeness? • After any ”word”? • Anytime? • What has actually happened? • System and user barge-in • Keep track of what we say, as well as what the user says

  17. Research highlight: Unobtrusiveness • With what should we respond? • Long prompts can be annoying • Short ones may be insufficient • How? • Efficiently or politely? • Speech, gesture, other? • Do we have to ”take turn”? • Backchannels • Grounding

  18. Thank you for your attention.

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