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Fourth Mexican International Conference on Computer Science
Toward Building Conversational Spoken-Language Interfaces: Acknowledgment Use in American English and Mexican Spanish
Tlaxcala, Mexico
September 08-September 12
ISBN: 0-7695-1915-6
Karen Ward, The University of Texas at El Paso
Tasha Hollingsed, The University of Texas at El Paso
Javier A. Aldaz Salmon, The University of Texas at El Paso
Should spoken-language interfaces incorporate human discourse phenomena? Acknowledgments, for example, are ubiquitous in human conversation but are rare in human-computer interaction. Are people unwilling to use this human convention when talking to a machine, or is their scarcity due to the design of current spoken-language interfaces? We found that, given a simple spoken-language interface that responded to acknowledgments, over two thirds of subjects used acknowledgments at least once, about the same number that used more traditional commands to control the interface. These results were consistent for both Mexican Spanish and American English versions of the interface, and they suggest that it may be possible to make use of human discourse mechanisms such as acknowledgment to build more flexible spoken-language interfaces.
Citation:
Karen Ward, Tasha Hollingsed, Javier A. Aldaz Salmon, "Toward Building Conversational Spoken-Language Interfaces: Acknowledgment Use in American English and Mexican Spanish," enc, pp.10, Fourth Mexican International Conference on Computer Science, 2003
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