


default search action
13th SIGDIAL Conference 2012: Seoul, South Korea
- Proceedings of the SIGDIAL 2012 Conference, The 13th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue, 5-6 July 2012, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea. The Association for Computer Linguistics 2012, ISBN 978-1-937284-44-2
- Tatsuya Kawahara:
Multi-modal Sensing and Analysis of Poster Conversations: Toward Smart Posterboard. 1-9 - Lina Maria Rojas-Barahona, Alejandra Lorenzo, Claire Gardent:
An End-to-End Evaluation of Two Situated Dialog Systems. 10-19 - William Yang Wang, Samantha L. Finkelstein, Amy Ogan, Alan W. Black, Justine Cassell:
"Love ya, jerkface": Using Sparse Log-Linear Models to Build Positive and Impolite Relationships with Teens. 20-29 - Alexander Koller, Konstantina Garoufi, Maria Staudte, Matthew W. Crocker:
Enhancing Referential Success by Tracking Hearer Gaze. 30-39 - Lu Wang, Claire Cardie:
Unsupervised Topic Modeling Approaches to Decision Summarization in Spoken Meetings. 40-49 - Sungjin Lee, Maxine Eskénazi:
An Unsupervised Approach to User Simulation: Toward Self-Improving Dialog Systems. 50-59 - Elijah Mayfield, David Adamson, Carolyn Penstein Rosé:
Hierarchical Conversation Structure Prediction in Multi-Party Chat. 60-69 - Masahiro Araki:
Rapid Development Process of Spoken Dialogue Systems using Collaboratively Constructed Semantic Resources. 70-73 - Milica Gasic, Pirros Tsiakoulis, Matthew Henderson, Blaise Thomson, Kai Yu, Eli Tzirkel, Steve J. Young:
The Effect of Cognitive Load on a Statistical Dialogue System. 74-78 - Christine Howes, Matthew Purver, Rosemarie McCabe, Patrick G. T. Healey, Mary Lavelle:
Predicting Adherence to Treatment for Schizophrenia from Dialogue Transcripts. 79-83 - Teruhisa Misu, Kallirroi Georgila, Anton Leuski, David R. Traum:
Reinforcement Learning of Question-Answering Dialogue Policies for Virtual Museum Guides. 84-93 - Christopher Michael Mitchell, Kristy Elizabeth Boyer, James C. Lester:
From Strangers to Partners: Examining Convergence within a Longitudinal Study of Task-Oriented Dialogue. 94-98 - Aasish Pappu, Alexander I. Rudnicky:
The Structure and Generality of Spoken Route Instructions. 99-107 - Joonsuk Park, Claire Cardie:
Improving Implicit Discourse Relation Recognition Through Feature Set Optimization. 108-112 - Ethan Selfridge, Peter A. Heeman:
A Temporal Simulator for Developing Turn-Taking Methods for Spoken Dialogue Systems. 113-117 - Congkai Sun, Louis-Philippe Morency:
Dialogue Act Recognition using Reweighted Speaker Adaptation. 118-125 - Kseniya Zablotskaya, Fernando Fernández Martínez, Wolfgang Minker:
Estimating Adaptation of Dialogue Partners with Different Verbal Intelligence. 126-130 - David DeVault, David R. Traum:
A Demonstration of Incremental Speech Understanding and Confidence Estimation in a Virtual Human Dialogue System. 131-133 - Srinivasan Janarthanam, Oliver Lemon, Xingkun Liu, Phil J. Bartie, William A. Mackaness, Tiphaine Dalmas, Jana Götze:
Integrating Location, Visibility, and Question-Answering in a Spoken Dialogue System for Pedestrian City Exploration. 134-136 - Fabrizio Morbini, Eric Forbell, David DeVault, Kenji Sagae, David R. Traum, Albert A. Rizzo:
A Mixed-Initiative Conversational Dialogue System for Healthcare. 137-139 - Changsong Liu, Rui Fang, Joyce Yue Chai:
Towards Mediating Shared Perceptual Basis in Situated Dialogue. 140-149 - Sucheta Ghosh, Giuseppe Riccardi, Richard Johansson:
Global Features for Shallow Discourse Parsing. 150-159 - Ngo Xuan Bach, Nguyen Le Minh, Akira Shimazu:
A Reranking Model for Discourse Segmentation using Subtree Features. 160-168 - Yi Ma, Antoine Raux, Deepak Ramachandran, Rakesh Gupta:
Landmark-Based Location Belief Tracking in a Spoken Dialog System. 169-178 - Pierre Lison:
Probabilistic Dialogue Models with Prior Domain Knowledge. 179-188 - Sungjin Lee, Maxine Eskénazi:
Exploiting Machine-Transcribed Dialog Corpus to Improve Multiple Dialog States Tracking Methods. 189-196 - Diane J. Litman:
Cohesion, Entrainment and Task Success in Educational Dialog. 197 - Nigel G. Ward, Alejandro Vega:
A Bottom-Up Exploration of the Dimensions of Dialog State in Spoken Interaction. 198-206 - Hannaneh Hajishirzi, Jill Fain Lehman, Jessica K. Hodgins:
Using Group History to Identify Character-Directed Utterances in Multi-Child Interactions. 207-216 - Katherine Forbes-Riley, Diane J. Litman:
Adapting to Multiple Affective States in Spoken Dialogue. 217-226 - Fumihiro Bessho, Tatsuya Harada, Yasuo Kuniyoshi:
Dialog System Using Real-Time Crowdsourcing and Twitter Large-Scale Corpus. 227-231 - Aoife Cahill, Arndt Riester:
Automatically Acquiring Fine-Grained Information Status Distinctions in German. 232-236 - Kotaro Funakoshi, Mikio Nakano, Takenobu Tokunaga, Ryu Iida:
A Unified Probabilistic Approach to Referring Expressions. 237-246 - Eunyoung Ha, Joseph F. Grafsgaard, Christopher Michael Mitchell, Kristy Elizabeth Boyer, James C. Lester:
Combining Verbal and Nonverbal Features to Overcome the "Information Gap" in Task-Oriented Dialogue. 247-256 - Ben Hixon, Rebecca J. Passonneau, Susan L. Epstein:
Semantic Specificity in Spoken Dialogue Requests. 257-260 - Hen-Hsen Huang, Hsin-Hsi Chen:
Contingency and Comparison Relation Labeling and Structure Prediction in Chinese Sentences. 261-269 - Anton Leuski, David DeVault:
A Study in How NLU Performance Can Affect the Choice of Dialogue System Architecture. 270-274 - Ethan Selfridge, Iker Arizmendi, Peter A. Heeman, Jason D. Williams:
Integrating Incremental Speech Recognition and POMDP-Based Dialogue Systems. 275-279 - Allison Terrell, Bilge Mutlu:
A Regression-based Approach to Modeling Addressee Backchannels. 280-289 - Anruo Wang, Barbara Di Eugenio, Lin Chen:
Improving Sentence Completion in Dialogues with Multi-Modal Features. 290-294 - Hendrik Buschmeier, Timo Baumann, Benjamin Dosch, Stefan Kopp, David Schlangen:
Combining Incremental Language Generation and Incremental Speech Synthesis for Adaptive Information Presentation. 295-303 - Lu Wang, Claire Cardie:
Focused Meeting Summarization via Unsupervised Relation Extraction. 304-313 - Casey Kennington, David Schlangen:
Markov Logic Networks for Situated Incremental Natural Language Understanding. 314-323

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.