Wallis2008

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Wallis2008
BibType ARTICLE
Key Wallis2008
Author(s) Peter Wallis
Title Revisiting the DARPA communicator data using conversation analysis
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, conversational machines, politeness, social norms, ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, interactive voice response, virtual characters
Publisher
Year 2008
Language
City
Month
Journal Interaction Studies
Volume 9
Number 3
Pages 434–457
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/is.9.3.05wal
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The state of the art in human computer conversation leaves something to be desired and, indeed, talking to a computer can be down-right annoying. This paper describes an approach to identifying “opportunities for improvement” in these systems by looking for abuse in the form of swear words. The premise is that humans swear at computers as a sanction and, as such, swear words represent a point of failure where the system did not behave as it should. Having identified where things went wrong, we can work backward through the transcripts and, using conversation analysis (CA) work out how things went wrong. Conversation analysis is a qualitative methodology and can appear quite alien — indeed unscientific — to those of us from a quantitative background. The paper starts with a description of Conversation analysis in its modern form, and then goes on to apply the methodology to transcripts of frustrated and annoyed users in the DARPA Communicator project. The conclusion is that there is at least one species of failure caused by the inability of the Communicator systems to handle mixed initiative at the discourse structure level. Along the way, I hope to demonstrate that there is an alternative future for computational linguistics that does not rely on larger and larger text corpora.

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