dialogue act coding and modalities

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Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities GSLT: Dialogue Systems Leif Grönqvist – [email protected] 11. June 2002 15:30

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Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities. GSLT: Dialogue Systems Leif Grönqvist – [email protected] 11. June 2002 15:30. Presentation Outline. Properties for dialogue act (in particular) coding schemes Mode – medium – modality Modality Theory The different coding schemes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

Dialogue Act Coding and ModalitiesGSLT: Dialogue Systems

Leif Grönqvist – [email protected]

11. June 2002 15:30

Page 2: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 2

Presentation Outline

• Properties for dialogue act (in particular) coding schemes

• Mode – medium – modality

• Modality Theory

• The different coding schemes

• Some interesting differences between the coding schemes

• Conclusions

Page 3: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 3

Properties for dialogue act coding schemes

• How general is it?• Is it powerful enough for natural

dialogue?• Does the scheme handle different

modalities?• Are the definitions precise enough to

make the scheme useful in dialogue systems?

Page 4: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 4

More properties for coding schemes

• Multi functional codings

• Mutual exclusive categories

• Discontinuous codings

• Relational codings

• Hierarchical coding values

• Multi-layer scheme

Page 5: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 5

Mode – medium – modality

• Some terms are used in different ways in different contexts

• Bretan and Bernsen use “modality” in the same way but psychologists do not.

• B & B do not agree on the term “medium”• Bernsen: “We should aim for a

terminology that is robust, conceptually clear and intuitively accepted.”

Page 6: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 6

Modality Theory

• Niels Ole Bernsen’s theory: “A generative taxonomy of output modalities”

• Start with a set of basic features: Linguistic/non-linguistic(non-)analogue(non-)arbitrarystatic/dynamicgraphics/sound/touch

Page 7: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 7

Modality Theory 2

• Combine them to get 48 distinct types

• Remove impossible combinations: 20 left

• One more feature:

Real world/diagrammic/graphs

resulting in 28 distinct modalities

Page 8: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 8

Page 9: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

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Page 10: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

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• 28 unimodal modalities

• Use of more than one will result in multimodality

Page 11: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 11

Selected Coding Schemes for Dialogue Acts

• LINLIN 1/2: Linköping, Ahrenberg et al, 1995• HCRC: Developed for the Map Task Corpus,

Andersson et al 1991• DAMSL: By Discourse Resource Initiative as

a standardized coding scheme, 1991• SWBD-DAMSL: Modified DAMSL by Stolcke

et al 2000• GBG: Communicative Acts by Allwood 2000

Page 12: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 12

Why these

• They cover some different types

• And are developed for different purposes

• Some of them are widely spread and well known

• I know something about them

Page 13: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 13

Interesting differences

• LINLIN and DAMSL are more general than GBG and HCRC

• GBG and DAMSL are the more powerful• DAMSL and HCRC do not handle non-

verbal dialogue acts as well as LINLIN and GBG

• GBG is the only one not directly useful in dialogue systems

Page 14: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 14

Conclusions

• Some researchers does not seem to believe in non-verbal dialogue acts at all:

in SWBD-DAMSL the coding types are mutually exclusive and two of the most common are:

Backchannel/Acknowledge

Non-verbal

Page 15: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 15

More conclusions• The linguists scheme (GBG) is very rich

but not useful I a dialogue system context• Modality should not be used to define

dialogue act categories – but in a second layer.

• Our intuition says that a nod or pointing at something could be an answer to a question

Page 16: Dialogue Act Coding and Modalities

11 juni 2002 Dialogue Systems: Leif Grönqvist 16

We are done

And probably out of time