| J. Alexandersson and P. Poller, "Toward multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous dialogues," in Proc. INLG-98, Niagara-on-the-lake, Canada, 1998. |
....a user interface supports the development of the automata The approach described is integrated in the Verbmobil system and successfully provides content information for the dialogue module. For example, the information provided with this system is the main basis for summary generation in Verbmobil[1]. The dialogue act based translation realized with this approach is also contributing, as one translation track amongst others, to the overall coverage of the Verbmobil system, especially in cases where the recognition is problematic. Currently, we are fine tuning both the analysis and generation ....
Jan Alexandersson and Peter Poller. Towards multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous speech dialogues. In Proceedings of INLG-98, Niagara-On-TheLake, 1998.
....length of 15 words the average runtime per sentence on a SUN ULTRA 2 is less than 0.5 seconds. Currently, even the longest sentence (40 words) needs under 2 seconds runtime. Within Verbmobil, the generation component will also be used for text generation when producing protocols as described in (Alexandersson and Poller, 1998). ....
J. Alexandersson and P. Poller. 1998. Towards multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous speech dialogues. In 9th INLGW, Niagara-on-the-lake, Canada.
No context found.
Jan Alexandersson and Peter Poller. 1998. Toward multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous speech dialogues. In Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, Canada, August.
....in the domain of appointment scheduling dialogues. In the second phase, different extensions in domain and functionality were to be implemented. The domain now includes travel planning and hotel reservations and one of the new features is the automatic generation of a dialogue summary or script [ Alexandersson and Poller, 1998 ] Since, in the second phase of Verbmobil, a possible scenario is that of a telephone server used by two participants with Verbmobil as a third party, a dialogue script does provide some kind of a status report where each participant can check what items have been agreed on already. A summary ....
....of the Information The accumulated context structures described so far are requested by other modules of the Vermobil system. We give a brief overview of how these modules use this data. Dialogue script generator The main consumer of the thematic structure is the dialogue script generator [ Alexandersson and Poller, 1998 ] It provides the user(s) with two different functionalities. The first, which is called dialogue script, is a condensed description of the most salient parts of the dialogue. The second, result summary, summarizes the result of the negotiation. In this paper we describe the result summary (the ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Jan Alexandersson and Peter Poller. Towards multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous speech dialogues. In Proceedings of INLG-98, Niagara-OnThe -Lake, 1998.
....In the last couple of years different methods for summarization have been developed. In this paper we report on a new system functionality within the scope of VerbMobil (Bub et al. 1997) a fully implemented speech to speech translation system, that generates German or English dialogue scripts (Alexandersson and Poller, 1998) as well as German or English summaries of a multilingual negotiation dialogue held with assistance of the system. By a script we mean a document that reflects the domain specific propositional contents of the individual turns of a dialogue as a whole, while a summary gives a compact ....
....for the list of project partners. 148 Synthesis and Translation Deep translation track: Generation Data Recognition Transfer Control Information Context and Prosody Deep Dialog Analysis Shallow Selection Analysis Figure 1: Part of the VerbMobil system logue act (Alexandersson et al. 1998) plays an important role. The dialogue act represents the communicative function of an utterance, which is an important information for the translation as well as the modeling of the dialogue as a whole. Examples of illocutionary acts are request and greet. Other acts can carry propositional ....
J. Alexandersson and P. Poller. 1998. Towards multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous speech dialogues.
No context found.
J. Alexandersson and P. Poller, "Toward multilingual protocol generation for spontaneous dialogues," in Proc. INLG-98, Niagara-on-the-lake, Canada, 1998.
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