Difference between revisions of "Dialogue Systems"

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--[[User:Olemon|Olemon]] 07:40, 11 December 2006 (EST)
 
--[[User:Olemon|Olemon]] 07:40, 11 December 2006 (EST)
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A small example of dialog involving playing cards that uses direct manipulation as well as English is [[http://www.yorku.ca/jmason/CardWorld1.html] CardWorld1].  It involves deictic and anaphoric reference as well as direct reference to a changeable configuration of piles of cards on a virtual table top.  The model can be extended in many directions, as suggested in the [[http://www.yorku.ca/jmason/UnderstandingEnglishInLimitedPragmaticDomains.html]documentation].  The implementation is in Java, and source code as well as executable code is available free.  It can also be [[http://typo3.asd-networks.com/web/index.php?id=415] run directly] from a Java enabled web browser. 
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-- [[User:Jmason|Jmason]] 00:35, 26 May 2010 (EDT)

Revision as of 21:39, 25 May 2010

Dialogue Systems

this is a stub - please add information!

Dialogue systems are human-computer interfaces where interaction is modelled on natural language conversations between humans. Dialogue systems can be speech-based, text-based, or multimodal (e.g. speech plus graphics), and are used in simple applications (such as booking cinema tickets) as well as much more complex research systems (e.g. collaboration with robots, tutorial dialogue systems).

There is a wikipedia article at on Dialogue Systems at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialogue_systems

A recent EC project on dialogue systems is the TALK project http://www.talk-project.org

--Olemon 07:40, 11 December 2006 (EST)

A small example of dialog involving playing cards that uses direct manipulation as well as English is [[1] CardWorld1]. It involves deictic and anaphoric reference as well as direct reference to a changeable configuration of piles of cards on a virtual table top. The model can be extended in many directions, as suggested in the [[2]documentation]. The implementation is in Java, and source code as well as executable code is available free. It can also be [[3] run directly] from a Java enabled web browser.

-- Jmason 00:35, 26 May 2010 (EDT)