Loading...

Constructive Dialogue Modelling: Speech Interaction and Rational Agents

ISBN: 978-0-470-06026-1

May 2009

178 pages

Description

Constructive Dialogue Modelling: Speech Interaction and Rational Agents provides an overview of the current dialogue technology and research trends in spoken dialogue systems, presenting a coherent perspective of AI-based cooperative interaction management. The book complements existing research regarding human-computer interfaces, speech and language technology, and communication studies in general, bringing different view-points together and integrating them into a single point of reference.

Key Features:

•Presents a guide to spoken dialogue technology and current research trends.

•Provides an overview of human factors in dialogue systems and delivers a new metaphor for human-computer interaction and computer as agent.

•Explains the architecture of dialogue systems using examples from systems such as Interact and DUMAS

•Offers a comprehensive overview of original research into the new trends in speech dialogue technology in light of innovations such as ubiquitous computing.

This book will provide essential reading for industrial designers and interface engineers, university researchers and teachers, computer scientists, human communication researchers, speech and language technologists, cognitive engineers/cognitive scientists, as well as social and media researchers, and psychologists. Advanced students and researchers in computer science, speech and language technologies, psychology and communication research will find this text of interest.

About the Author
Kristiina Jokinen is a Docent of Interaction Technology at the University of Tampere, and Docent of Language Technology at the University of Helsinki. Her areas of expertise include AI-based spoken dialogue management, intelligent interactive systems, speech-based adaptive interfaces, human-computer communication, rational agents, and cooperative communication.
She has over 12 years' experience in initiating and leading academic and industrial research projects. She has worked in Japan (ATR Interpreting Telecommunications Laboratory in Kyoto), and in Europe (University of Manchester, Lernout and Hauspie Speech Products, and University of Helsinki). In the recent EU research project DUMAS she was the scientific coordinator on a project focused on the adaptation and user modelling in a mobile email application and machine learning methods.
During the academic year 2004-05 she was a Visiting Fellow at the University of Cambridge, working at the Computer Laboratory. She is the elected Secretary for 2004-2006 of SIGDial, the Special Interest Group for Discourse and Dialogue of ACL (Association for Computational Linguistics) and ISCA (International Speech Communication Association).