1 / 11

Dialogue types

Dialogue types. GSLT course on dialogue systems spring 2002 Staffan Larsson. Inquiry- vs. action-oriented dialogue. Inquiry oriented dialogue (IOD) has the primary goal of exchanging information regardless of whether and how this information will be used in future actions

xander
Télécharger la présentation

Dialogue types

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dialogue types GSLT course on dialogue systems spring 2002 Staffan Larsson

  2. Inquiry- vs. action-oriented dialogue • Inquiry oriented dialogue (IOD) has the primary goal of exchanging information • regardless of whether and how this information will be used in future actions • Action oriented dialogue (AOD) has the primary goal of a participant performing or being obliged to perform an action (or plan, i.e. a complex action)

  3. Inquiry-oriented dialogue • utterance types: ask, answer • Information-seeking dialogue: one DP asks the questions, the other answers them • Information-exchange (information oriented) dialogue: both DPs ask questions and provide answers • can be seen as a sequence of infoseeking dialogues, possibly with embedded subdialogues

  4. Action-oriented dialogue • utterance types: request, confirm • In simple AOD, only one participant becomes obliged/comitted to some action or plan • Actions can either be performed ”online” while the dialogue is happening, or they may be stored as a plan to be performed after the dialogue (”offline”)

  5. Negotiative dialogue • utterance types: suggest, accept, reject • What is it? • Negotiation is a type of problem-solving • Possible definition of negotiative dialogue: DPs discuss several alternative solutions to a problem before choosing one of them • Negotiation does not imply conflicting goals • perhaps not 100% correspondence to everyday use of the word “negotiation”, but useful to keep collaborativity as a separate dimension from negotiation • Both AOD and IOD can be negotiative • in a flight information service, the user does not become obliged to fly anywhere; so it’s IOD • but several different flights may be discussed

  6. Negotiation tasks • Some factors influencing negotiation • distribution of information between DPs (who knows what) • whether DPs must commit jointly (e.g. Coconut) or one DP can make the comittment (e.g. flight booking) • We’re initially trying to model negotiation in flight booking • sample dialouge • U: flights to paris on september 13 please • S: there is one flight at 07:45 and one at 12:00 • U: what airline is the 12:00 one • S: the 12:00 flight is an SAS flight • U: I’ll take the 12:00 flight please • Sys provides alternatives, User makes the choice • Sys knows timetable, User knows when he wants to travel etc.

  7. Degrees of negotiativity • non-negotiative dialogue: only one alternative is discussed • semi-negotiative dialogue: a new alternative can be introduced by altering parameters of the previous alternative, but previous alternatives are not retained • negotiative dialogue: several alternatives can be introduced, and old alternatives are retained and can be returned to

  8. BDI: agents • What is needed for intelligent behaviour? • perception • Beliefs • Desires • planning and decistion making ability (deliberation) • Intentions • ability to act • To interact, also need social attitudes • common ground • obligations¨¨¨ • committments • rights

  9. from AI: • actions (e.g. buy a ticket) have • preconditions ( seller has ticket, buyer has money) • decomposition ( … ) • effects

  10. BDI and speech acts • ”normal” actions affect the external world • speech acts affect mental states of agents • i.e. their beliefs, desires, intentions, … • so, speech acts can be described in terms of preconditions and effects on mental states • ConvinceByInform(S, H, P) [Allen] • roles: S=speaker, H=hearer, P=proposition • precondition: bel(S, P) • effect: bel(H, P)

  11. later developments • Traum • incorporate social attitudes • model the fact that utterances are not always successful • initiate_assert(S, H, P) • precondition: int( S, mbel( S, H, P ) ) • effect: bel( H, int( S, mbel( S, H, P ) ) ) • acknowledge_assert( S, H, P ) • precondition: bel( S, int( H, mbel( S, H, P ))) • effect: mbel( S, H, P )

More Related