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      Dialogue Act Modeling for Automatic Tagging and Recognition of Conversational Speech

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          Abstract

          We describe a statistical approach for modeling dialogue acts in conversational speech, i.e., speech-act-like units such as Statement, Question, Backchannel, Agreement, Disagreement, and Apology. Our model detects and predicts dialogue acts based on lexical, collocational, and prosodic cues, as well as on the discourse coherence of the dialogue act sequence. The dialogue model is based on treating the discourse structure of a conversation as a hidden Markov model and the individual dialogue acts as observations emanating from the model states. Constraints on the likely sequence of dialogue acts are modeled via a dialogue act n-gram. The statistical dialogue grammar is combined with word n-grams, decision trees, and neural networks modeling the idiosyncratic lexical and prosodic manifestations of each dialogue act. We develop a probabilistic integration of speech recognition with dialogue modeling, to improve both speech recognition and dialogue act classification accuracy. Models are trained and evaluated using a large hand-labeled database of 1,155 conversations from the Switchboard corpus of spontaneous human-to-human telephone speech. We achieved good dialogue act labeling accuracy (65% based on errorful, automatically recognized words and prosody, and 71% based on word transcripts, compared to a chance baseline accuracy of 35% and human accuracy of 84%) and a small reduction in word recognition error.

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          Dialogue-Games Metacommunication structures for natural language interaction

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            Discriminative estimation of interpolation parameters for language model classifiers

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              2000-06-11
              2000-10-26
              Article
              cs/0006023
              ac79e4be-f210-4cf5-9136-ac63f0155d86
              History
              Custom metadata
              Computational Linguistics 26(3), 339-373, September 2000
              35 pages, 5 figures. Changes in copy editing (note title spelling changed)
              cs.CL

              Theoretical computer science
              Theoretical computer science

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