matthias denecke - Google Scholar

matthias denecke - Google Scholar
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reuse of spoken dialogue applications

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M Denecke, A Waibel - Proc. Eurospeech, 1997 - Citeseer
Much work has been done in dialogue modeling for Human- Computer Interaction. Problems
arise in situations where disambiguation of highly ambiguous data base output is necessary.
We propose to model the task rather than the dialogue itself. Furthermore, we propose ...
Cited by 49 - Related articles - Cached - All 7 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

upenn.edu [PDF]M Denecke - Proceedings of the 19th international conference on …, 2002 - portal.acm.org
A{stract We implemented a spoken dialogue system ar- ite ture for rapid prototyping. T e features
t at support rapid prototyping in lude a lear separation of generi dialogue pro essing al- gorit
ms from domain and language spe ifi knowledge sour es. In an experiment, it ould be s ...
Cited by 52 - Related articles - All 16 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

psu.edu [PDF]P Geutner, M Denecke, U Meier, M Westphal, A … - … Conference on Spoken …, 1998 - Citeseer
This paper describes our latest efforts in building a speech rec- ognizer for operating a navigation
system through speech instead of typed input. Compared to conventional speech recognition
for navigation systems, where the input is usually restricted to a fixed set of keywords and ...
Cited by 17 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 11 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

psu.edu [PDF]M Denecke - Sixth International Conference on Spoken Language …, 2000 - Citeseer
We introduce multidimensional feature structures as a generaliza- tion of standard slot/filler representations
commonly employed in spoken language dialogue systems. Nodes in multidimensional feature
structures contain an n dimensional vector of values in- stead of one single filler element. ...
Cited by 15 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 14 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

psu.edu [PDF]M Denecke - The Workshop on Multilingual Speech Communication, 2000 - Citeseer
ABSTRACT Currently, much effort is spent for the creation of linguistic re- sources such as grammars
or domain models each time a new task oriented spoken language application is deployed. The
resources for different applications, though different, resemble each other enough to ...
Cited by 14 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 4 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

psu.edu [PDF]M Denecke, J Yang - Advances in Multimodal Interfaces—ICMI 2000 - Springer
In the past, research on multimodal input processing systems has focused on how complementary
information in different modalitics can be combined to arrive at a nmre inforlnal, ive rel)reselttation
[4, 16]). I"or exmllple, representations of dcictic anaphora are combined with ...
Cited by 13 - Related articles - Get at CISTI - All 10 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

[CITATION] SMaRT: The smart meeting room task at ISL

psu.edu [PDF]A Waibel, T Schultz, M Bett, M Denecke, R Malkin, I … - 2003 IEEE International …, 2003
Cited by 71 - Related articles - All 25 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

psu.edu [PDF]M Denecke - INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON …, 1997 - Citeseer
Much work has been done in dialogue mod- eling for spoken and multi-modal human- computer
interaction. Problems can arise in situations that do not correspond to the dia- logue model. For
this reason, we propose information-centered dialogue processing in which the actions to ...
Cited by 9 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 11 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

M Denecke, K Dohsaka, M Nakano - Natural Language Processing–IJCNLP … - Springer
The application of reinforcement learning to finding optimal dialogue policies holds great potential
for the automated design of spoken dialogue systems. The task of designing the dialogue policy
is taken over by the computer, directed only by feedback from the user whether the ...
Cited by 6 - Related articles - All 4 versions - Import into BibTeX

 

macdaniels.net [PDF]P Gieselmann, M Denecke, A … - … Conference on Speech …, 2003 - macdaniels.net
Abstract There is a great potential for combining speech and gestures to improve human computer
interaction because this kind of communication resembles more and more the natural
commu- nication humans use every day with each other. Therefore, this paper is about ...
Cited by 6 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 15 versions - Import into BibTeX

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