


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.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














