Lexical Acquisition during Dialogues through Implicit Confirmation release_nomzzcppafaspfs3ki77gjpp2q

by Kazunori Komatani, Kohei Ono, Ryu Takeda, Eric Nichols, Mikio Nakano

Published in Dialogue and Discourse by University of Illinois Libraries.

2022   Volume 13, p96-122

Abstract

We have been addressing the problem of acquiring attributes of unknown terms through dialogues and previously proposed an approach using the implicit confirmation process. It is crucial for dialogue systems to ask questions that do not diminish the user's willingness to talk. In this paper, we conducted a user study to investigate user impression for several question types, including explicit and implicit, to acquire lexical knowledge. We clarified the order among the types and found that repeating the same question type annoys the user and degrades user impression even when the content of the questions is correct. We also propose a method for determining whether an estimated attribute is correct, which is included in an implicit question. The method exploits multiple-user responses to implicit questions about the attribute of the same unknown term. Experimental results revealed that the proposed method exhibited a higher precision rate for determining the correctly estimated attributes than when only single-user responses were considered.
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