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  • Computer science
  • Computer Science  (14)
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9783662540336
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 261 Seiten)
    Series Statement: The Frontiers Collection
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The technological singularity
    Parallel Title: Print version Callaghan, Victor The Technological Singularity : Managing the Journey
    DDC: 100
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    Keywords: Computer science ; Electronic books ; Einzigkeit ; Technischer Fortschritt ; Wissenschaftsethik ; Künstliche Intelligenz ; Risikomanagement
    Abstract: Foreword -- References -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- 1 Introduction to the Technological Singularity -- 1.1 Why the "Singularity" Is Important -- 1.2 Superintelligence, Superpowers -- 1.3 Danger, Danger! -- 1.4 Uncertainties and Safety -- References -- Risks of, and Responses to, the Journey to the Singularity -- 2 Risks of the Journey to the Singularity -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Catastrophic AGI Risk -- 2.2.1 Most Tasks Will Be Automated -- 2.2.2 AGIs Might Harm Humans -- 2.2.3 AGIs May Become Powerful Quickly -- 2.2.3.1 Hardware Overhang -- 2.2.3.2 Speed Explosion -- 2.2.3.3 Intelligence Explosion -- References -- 3 Responses to the Journey to the Singularity -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Post-Superintelligence Responses -- 3.3 Societal Proposals -- 3.3.1 Do Nothing -- 3.3.1.1 AI Is Too Distant to Be Worth Our Attention -- 3.3.1.2 Little Risk, no Action Needed -- 3.3.1.3 Let Them Kill Us -- 3.3.1.4 "Do Nothing" Proposals-Our View -- 3.3.2 Integrate with Society -- 3.3.2.1 Legal and Economic Controls -- 3.3.2.2 Foster Positive Values -- 3.3.2.3 "Integrate with Society" Proposals-Our View -- 3.3.3 Regulate Research -- 3.3.3.1 Review Boards -- 3.3.3.2 Encourage Research into Safe AGI -- 3.3.3.3 Differential Technological Progress -- 3.3.3.4 International Mass Surveillance -- 3.3.3.5 "Regulate Research" Proposals-Our View -- 3.3.4 Enhance Human Capabilities -- 3.3.4.1 Would We Remain Human? -- 3.3.4.2 Would Evolutionary Pressures Change Us? -- 3.3.4.3 Would Uploading Help? -- 3.3.4.4 "Enhance Human Capabilities" Proposals-Our View -- 3.3.5 Relinquish Technology -- 3.3.5.1 Outlaw AGI -- 3.3.5.2 Restrict Hardware -- 3.3.5.3 "Relinquish Technology" Proposals-Our View -- 3.4 External AGI Constraints -- 3.4.1 AGI Confinement -- 3.4.1.1 Safe Questions -- 3.4.1.2 Virtual Worlds -- 3.4.1.3 Resetting the AGI -- 3.4.1.4 Checks and Balances
    Abstract: 3.4.1.5 "AI Confinement" Proposals-Our View -- 3.4.2 AGI Enforcement -- 3.4.2.1 "AGI Enforcement" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5 Internal Constraints -- 3.5.1 Oracle AI -- 3.5.1.1 Oracles Are Likely to Be Released -- 3.5.1.2 Oracles Will Become Authorities -- 3.5.1.3 "Oracle AI" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5.2 Top-Down Safe AGI -- 3.5.2.1 Three Laws -- 3.5.2.2 Categorical Imperative -- 3.5.2.3 Principle of Voluntary Joyous Growth -- 3.5.2.4 Utilitarianism -- 3.5.2.5 Value Learning -- 3.5.2.6 Approval-Directed Agents -- 3.5.2.7 "Top-Down Safe AGI" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5.3 Bottom-up and Hybrid Safe AGI -- 3.5.3.1 Evolutionary Invariants -- 3.5.3.2 Evolved Morality -- 3.5.3.3 Reinforcement Learning -- 3.5.3.4 Human-like AGI -- 3.5.3.5 "Bottom-up and Hybrid Safe AGI" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5.4 AGI Nanny -- 3.5.4.1 "AGI Nanny" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5.5 Motivational Scaffolding -- 3.5.6 Formal Verification -- 3.5.6.1 "Formal Verification" Proposals-Our View -- 3.5.7 Motivational Weaknesses -- 3.5.7.1 High Discount Rates -- 3.5.7.2 Easily Satiable Goals -- 3.5.7.3 Calculated Indifference -- 3.5.7.4 Programmed Restrictions -- 3.5.7.5 Legal Machine Language -- 3.5.7.6 "Motivational Weaknesses" Proposals-Our View -- 3.6 Conclusion -- Acknowledgementss -- References -- Managing the Singularity Journey -- 4 How Change Agencies Can Affect Our Path Towards a Singularity -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Pre-singularity: The Dynamic Process of Technological Change -- 4.2.1 Paradigm Shifts -- 4.2.2 Technological Change and Innovation Adoption -- 4.2.3 The Change Agency Perspective -- 4.2.3.1 Business Organisations as Agents of Change in Innovation Practice -- 4.2.3.2 Social Networks as Agents of Change -- 4.2.3.3 The Influence of Entrepreneurs as Agents of Change -- 4.2.3.4 Nation States as Agents of Change -- 4.3 Key Drivers of Technology Research and Their Impact
    Abstract: 4.4 The Anti-singularity Postulate -- 4.5 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Agent Foundations for Aligning Machine Intelligence with Human Interests: A Technical Research Agenda -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.1.1 Why These Problems? -- 5.2 Highly Reliable Agent Designs -- 5.2.1 Realistic World-Models -- 5.2.2 Decision Theory -- 5.2.3 Logical Uncertainty -- 5.2.4 Vingean Reflection -- 5.3 Error-Tolerant Agent Designs -- 5.4 Value Specification -- 5.5 Discussion -- 5.5.1 Toward a Formal Understanding of the Problem -- 5.5.2 Why Start Now? -- References -- 6 Risk Analysis and Risk Management for the Artificial Superintelligence Research and Development Process -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Key ASI R&D Risk and Decision Issues -- 6.3 Risk Analysis Methods -- 6.3.1 Fault Trees -- 6.3.2 Event Trees -- 6.3.3 Estimating Parameters for Fault Trees and Event Trees -- 6.3.4 Elicitation of Expert Judgment -- 6.3.5 Aggregation of Data Sources -- 6.4 Risk Management Decision Analysis Methods -- 6.5 Evaluating Opportunities for Future Research -- 6.6 Concluding Thoughts -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 7 Diminishing Returns and Recursive Self Improving Artificial Intelligence -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Self-improvement -- 7.2.1 Evolutionary Algorithms -- 7.2.2 Learning Algorithms -- 7.3 Limits of Recursively Improving Intelligent Algorithms -- 7.3.1 Software Improvements -- 7.3.2 Hardware Improvements -- 7.4 The Takeaway -- References -- 8 Energy, Complexity, and the Singularity -- 8.1 A Contradiction -- 8.2 Challenges -- 8.2.1 Climate Change -- 8.2.2 Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services -- 8.2.3 Energy-or, Where's My Jetsons Car? -- 8.2.4 The Troubles with Science -- 8.3 Energy and Complexity -- 8.4 Exponentials and Feedbacks -- 8.5 Ingenuity, not Data Processing -- 8.6 In Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References
    Abstract: 9 Computer Simulations as a Technological Singularity in the Empirical Sciences -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 The Anthropocentric Predicament -- 9.3 The Reliability of Computer Simulations -- 9.3.1 Verification and Validation Methods -- 9.4 Final Words -- References -- 10 Can the Singularity Be Patented? (And Other IP Conundrums for Converging Technologies) -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 A Singular Promise -- 10.3 Intellectual Property -- 10.3.1 Some General IP Problems in Converging Technologies -- 10.3.2 Some Gaps in IP Relating to the Singularity -- 10.4 Limits to Ownership and Other Monopolies -- 10.5 Owning the Singularity -- 10.6 Ethics, Patents and Artificial Agents -- 10.7 The Open Alternative -- References -- 11 The Emotional Nature of Post-Cognitive Singularities -- 11.1 Technological Singularity: Key Concepts -- 11.1.1 Tools and Methods -- 11.1.2 Singularity: Main Hypotheses -- 11.1.3 Implications of Post-singularity Entities with Advanced, Meta-cognitive Intelligence Ruled by Para-emotions -- 11.2 Post-cognitive Singularity Entities and their Physical Nature -- 11.2.1 Being a Singularity Entity -- 11.2.1.1 Super-intelligent Entities -- 11.2.1.2 Transhumans -- 11.2.2 Post Singularity Entities as Living Systems? -- 11.3 Para-emotional Systems -- 11.4 Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 12 A Psychoanalytic Approach to the Singularity: Why We Cannot Do Without Auxiliary Constructions -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 AI and Intelligence -- 12.3 Consciousness -- 12.4 Reason and Emotion -- 12.5 Psychoanalysis -- 12.6 Conclusion -- References -- Reflections on the Journey -- 13 Reflections on the Singularity Journey -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Eliezer Yudkowsky -- 13.2.1 The Event Horizon -- 13.2.2 Accelerating Change -- 13.2.3 The Intelligence Explosion -- 13.2.4 MIRI and LessWrong -- 13.3 Scott Aaronson -- 13.4 Stuart Armstrong
    Abstract: 13.5 Too Far in the Future -- 13.6 Scott Siskind -- 13.6.1 Wireheading -- 13.6.2 Work on AI Safety Now -- 14 Singularity Blog Insights -- 14.1 Three Major Singularity Schools -- 14.2 AI Timeline Predictions: Are We Getting Better? -- 14.3 No Time Like the Present for AI Safety Work -- 14.4 The Singularity Is Far -- Appendix -- The Coming Technological Singularity: How to Survive in the Post-human Era (reprint) -- References -- References -- Titles in this Series
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781107060432
    Language: English
    Pages: xv, 535 Seiten , Diagramme
    DDC: 302/.130285
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    Keywords: Informatik ; Social choice ; Interdisciplinary research ; Computer science ; Public-Choice-Theorie ; Computerunterstütztes Verfahren ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Informatik ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Public-Choice-Theorie ; Computerunterstütztes Verfahren ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Informatik
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9781107446984
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xv, 535 Seiten) , Diagramme
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 302/.130285
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    Keywords: Informatik ; Social choice ; Interdisciplinary research ; Computer science ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Computerunterstütztes Verfahren ; Public-Choice-Theorie ; Informatik ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Public-Choice-Theorie ; Computerunterstütztes Verfahren ; Kollektiventscheidung ; Informatik
    Note: Auf der Frontpage: "Online publication date: May 2016" , Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 May 2016)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9783319219547
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Edition: Springer eBook Collection. Computer Science
    Series Statement: Human-Computer Interaction Series
    DDC: 005.437
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    Keywords: Computer science ; User interfaces (Computer systems) ; Application software ; Social sciences ; Ethnomethodologie ; Design Thinking ; Wissenschaftskritik
    Abstract: This book aims to deconstruct ethnography to alert systems designers, and other stakeholders, to the issues presented by new approaches that move beyond the studies of ‘work’ and ‘work practice’ within the social sciences (in particular anthropology and sociology). The theoretical and methodological apparatus of the social sciences distort the social and cultural world as lived in and understood by ordinary members, whose common-sense understandings shape the actual milieu into which systems are placed and used.  In Deconstructing Ethnography the authors show how ‘new’ calls are returning systems design to ‘old’ and problematic ways of understanding the social. They argue that systems design can be appropriately grounded in the social through the ordinary methods that members use to order their actions and interactions.  This work is written for post-graduate students and researchers alike, as well as design practitioners who have an interest in bringing the social to bear on design in a systematic rather than a piecemeal way. This is not a ‘how to’ book, but instead elaborates the foundations upon which the social can be systematically built into the design of ubiquitous and interactive systems
    Description / Table of Contents: IntroductionBuilding the Social into System Design -- Ethnography as Cultural Theory -- ‘New’ Ethnography and Ubiquitous Computing -- Interpretation, Reflexivity and Objectivity -- The Missing What of Ethnographic Studies -- Ethnography, Ethnomethodology and Design -- Members’ Not Ethnographers’ Methods.
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9783319016672
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VIII, 79 p. 11 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: SpringerBriefs in Education
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Grand Challenges in Technology Enhanced Learning
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    Keywords: Computer science ; Education ; Education ; Computer science ; Computer science ; Education ; Konferenzschrift 2013 ; E-Learning ; E-Learning
    Abstract: This book presents a key piece of the vision and strategy developed in STELLAR. It sets out a new mid-term agenda by defining Grand Challenges for research and development in technology-enhanced learning. Other than mere technology prizes, STELLAR Grand Challenges deal with problems at the interface of social and technical sciences. They pose problems that can be solved only in interdisciplinary collaboration. The descriptions of the Grand Challenge Problems were sent out to a number of stakeholders from industry, academia, and policy-making who responded with insightful, creative and critical comments bringing in their specific perspectives. This book will inspire everyone interested in TEL and its neighboring disciplines in their future projects. All of the listed problems, first hints with respect to the approach, measurable success indicators and funding sources are outlined. The challenges focus on what noted experts regard as important upcoming, pending, and innovative fields of research, the solution of which is within reach in a timeframe of a mere 2 to 15 years of work
    Description / Table of Contents: Grand Challenge Problems from the Alpine Rendez-Vous - an Introduction1.1 The Concept of Grand Challenge Problems -- 1.2 Development of the Grand Challenge Problems at the Alpine Rendez-Vous -- 2 -- 2.1.1 GCP1: Open Collaboration in Formal Education -- 2.1.2 GCP2: Technology-Supported Representation-Fitness -- 2.1.3 GCP3: Rich-Media Assignments -- 2.1.4 GCP4: Supporting an Open Culture of Design for TEL -- 2.1.5 GCP5: Multi-Level Evaluations of TEL -- Guest Commentaries on Connecting Learners -- 2.1.6 Guest Commentary by Roy Peas -- 2.1.7 Guest Commentary by Michelle Selinger.- 2.2 Grand Challenge Problems Focusing on Orchestrating Learning -- 2.2.1 GCP6: Emotion-Adaptive TEL -- 2.2.2 GCP7: Assessment and Automated Feedback -- 2.2.3 GCP8: One Informed Tutor per Child -- 2.2.4 GCP9: Improving Educational Practices through Data-supported Information Systems -- 2.2.5 GCP10: Semiotic Recommender Systems for Learning -- 2.2.6 GCP11: Enhancing Learning with Improved Information Retrieval.- 2.2.7 GCP12: Open TEL Practices -- Guest Commentaries on Orchestrating Learning -- 2.2.8 Guest Commentary -- 2.2.9 Guest Commentary by Florian Schulz-Pernice -- 2.2.10 Guest Commentary by Jim Slotta -- 2.3 Grand Challenge Problems Focusing on Contextualising Learning -- 2.3.1 GCP13: Learning Reading at Home (Authors: Andrew Manches, Ros Sutherland and Sarah Eagle) -- 2.3.2 GCP14: Technology for Young Children’s Expression of Scientific Ideas (Authors: Andrew Manches & Ros Sutherland) -- 2.3.3 GCP15: Evaluating Informal TEL (Author: Denise M. Whitelock) -- 2.3.4 GCP16: Engaging the Brains Reward System.- 2.3.5 GCP17: Drop-Out Prevention through Attrition Analytics -- 2.3.6 GCP18: New Forms of Assessment for Social TEL Environments -- 2.3.7 GCP19: Guidance for Technology Use in Early Years -- 2.3.8 GCP20: TEL Plasticity -- 2.3.9 GCP21: European TEL DataMart -- Guest Commentaries on Contextualising Learning -- 2.3.10 Guest Commentary by Charles Crook -- 2.3.11 Guest Commentary by Allison Littlejohn -- 2.3.12 Guest Commentary by Yves Punie -- 2.3.13 Guest Commentary by Karen Velasco -- GCP22: Open Research Methodology Infrastructure for CSCL.- General Conclusions -- References.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg
    ISBN: 9783642453588
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXIV, 459 p. 61 illus., 23 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Theory and Applications of Natural Language Processing
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Natural language processing of semitic languages
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    Keywords: Computer science ; Computer Science ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Computational linguistics ; Computer science ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Computational linguistics ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Semitische Sprachen ; Natürliche Sprache
    Abstract: Part I Natural Language Processing Core-Technologies -- 1.Linguistic Introduction: The Orthography, Morphology and Syntax of Semitic Languages. R.Fabri, M.Gasser, N. Habash, G. Kiraz and S.Wintner -- 2.Morphological Processing of Semitic Languages. S.Wintner -- 3.Syntax and Parsing of Semitic Languages. R. Tsarfaty -- 4.Semantic Processing of Semitic Languages. M. Diab and Y.Marton -- 5.Language Modeling. I. Heintz -- Part II Natural Language Processing Applications -- 6.Statistical Machine Translation. H. Hassan and K.Darwish -- 7.Named Entity Recognition. B.Mohit -- 8.Anaphora Resolution. K.M. Seddik and A. Farghaly -- 9.Relation Extraction. V. Castelli and I. Zitouni -- 10.Information Retrieval. K. Darwish -- 11.Question Answering. Y. Benajiba, P. Rosso, L. Abouenour, O. Trigui, K.Bouzoubaa and L.H. Belguith -- 12.Automatic Summarization -- L.H. Belguith, M. Ellouze, M.H. Maaloul, M. Jaoua, F. Kallel Jaoua and P. Blache -- 13.Automatic Speech Recognition. H. Soltau, G. Saon, L. Mangu, H-K.Kuo, B.Kingsbury, S. Chu and F. Biadsy
    Abstract: Research in Natural Language Processing (NLP) has rapidly advanced in recent years, resulting in exciting algorithms for sophisticated processing of text and speech in various languages. Much of this work focuses on English; in this book we address another group of interesting and challenging languages for NLP research: the Semitic languages. The Semitic group of languages includes Arabic (206 million native speakers), Amharic (27 million), Hebrew (7 million), Tigrinya (6.7 million), Syriac (1 million) and Maltese (419 thousand). Semitic languages exhibit unique morphological processes, challenging syntactic constructions, and various other phenomena that are less prevalent in other natural languages. These challenges call for unique solutions, many of which are described in this book. The 13 chapters presented in this book bring together leading scientists from several universities and research institutes worldwide. While this book devotes some attention to cutting-edge algorithms and techniques, its primary purpose is a thorough explication of best practices in the field. Furthermore, every chapter describes how the techniques discussed apply to Semitic languages. The book covers both statistical approaches to NLP, which are dominant across various applications nowadays, and the more traditional, rule-based approaches, that were proven useful for several other application domains. We hope that this book will provide a "one-stop-shop'' for all the requisite background and practical advice when building NLP applications for Semitic languages
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface; Acknowledgments; Technical Review Committee; Contents; About the Editor; Part I Natural Language Processing Core-Technologies; Chapter1 Linguistic Introduction: The Orthography, Morphology and Syntax of Semitic Languages; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Amharic; 1.2.1 Orthography; 1.2.2 Derivational Morphology; Lexicon; Root and Pattern Processes; Other Derivational Processes; 1.2.3 Inflectional Morphology; Verbs; Nominals; 1.2.4 Basic Syntactic Structure; Noun Phrases; Clauses; 1.3 Arabic; 1.3.1 Orthography; Arabic Script; Arabic Spelling; 1.3.2 Morphology; Templatic Morphology
    Description / Table of Contents: Concatenative MorphologyDerivational Morphology; Inflectional Morphology; Form-Function Independence; Dialectal Arabic Morphology; Morphological Ambiguity; 1.3.3 Basic Syntactic Structure; Morphology and Syntax; Sentence Structure; Nominal Phrase Structure; Relative Clauses; Arabic Dialect Syntax; 1.4 Hebrew; 1.4.1 Orthography; 1.4.2 Derivational Morphology; Root and Pattern Processes; Other Derivational Processes; 1.4.3 Inflectional Morphology; Verbs; Nominals; Other Closed-Class Items; 1.4.4 Morphological Ambiguity; 1.4.5 Basic Syntactic Structure; 1.5 Maltese; 1.5.1 Orthography
    Description / Table of Contents: 1.5.2 Derivational MorphologyMixed Root-Based and Stem-Based Morphology; 1.5.3 Inflectional Morphology; Verbs; Nominals; Other Closed Class Items; 1.5.4 Basic Syntactic Structure; 1.6 Syriac; 1.6.1 Orthography; 1.6.2 Derivational Morphology; 1.6.3 Inflectional Morphology; 1.6.4 Syntax; 1.7 Contrastive Analysis; 1.7.1 Orthography; 1.7.2 Phonology; 1.7.3 Morphology; 1.7.4 Syntax; 1.7.5 Lexicon; 1.8 Conclusion; References; Chapter2 Morphological Processing of Semitic Languages; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Basic Notions; 2.3 The Challenges of Morphological Processing
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.4 Computational Approaches to Morphology2.4.1 Two-Level Morphology; 2.4.2 Multi-tape Automata; 2.4.3 The Xerox Approach; 2.4.4 Registered Automata; 2.4.5 Analysis by Generation; 2.4.6 Functional Morphology; 2.5 Morphological Analysis and Generation of Semitic Languages; 2.5.1 Amharic; 2.5.2 Arabic; 2.5.3 Hebrew; 2.5.4 Other Languages; 2.5.5 Related Applications; 2.6 Morphological Disambiguation of Semitic Languages; 2.7 Future Directions; References; Chapter3 Syntax and Parsing of Semitic Languages; 3.1 Introduction; 3.1.1 Parsing Systems; Syntactic Analysis; Models and Algorithms
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.1.2 Semitic LanguagesScript and Orthography; Morphology; Syntax; 3.1.3 The Main Challenges; The Architectural Challenge; The Modeling Challenge; The Lexical Challenge; 3.1.4 Summary and Conclusion; 3.2 Case Study: Generative Probabilistic Parsing; 3.2.1 Formal Preliminaries; Probabilistic Grammars; Training; Decoding; Evaluation; 3.2.2 An Architecture for Parsing Semitic Languages; Preliminaries; Joint Probabilistic Modeling; Lattice-Based Decoding; Evaluation; Summary and Conclusion; 3.2.3 The Syntactic Model; PCFG Refinements; Constrained Parsing; Discriminative Approaches
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.2.4 The Lexical Model
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London [u.a.] : Springer
    ISBN: 9781447127260
    Language: English
    Pages: X, 207 S.
    Edition: Online-Ausg. Springer eBook Collection. Computer Science Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Series Statement: Human-Computer Interaction Series
    DDC: 305.800285421
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    Keywords: Computer science ; Software engineering ; Software Engineering
    Abstract: Peter Tolmie
    Abstract: Ethnography is now a fundamental feature of design practice, taught in universities worldwide and practiced widely in commerce. Despite its rise to prominence a great many competing perspectives exist and there are few practical texts to support the development of competence. Doing Design Ethnography elaborates the ethnomethodological perspective on ethnography, a distinctive approach that provides canonical 'studies of work' in and for design. It provides an extensive treatment of the approach, with a particular slant on providing a pedagogical text that will support the development of competence for students, career researchers and design practitioners. It is organised around a complementary series of self-contained chapters, each of which address key features of doing the job of ethnography for purposes of system design. The book will be of broad appeal to students and practitioners in HCI, CSCW and software engineering, providing valuable insights as to how to conduct ethnography and relate it to design.
    Description / Table of Contents: Doing Design Ethnography; Contents; Chapter 1: Précis; Further Reading; Chapter 2: Ethnography and Systems Design; 2.1 The Turn to the Social in Systems Design; 2.2 Beginnings; 2.3 First Steps; 2.4 Faltering Towards Design; 2.5 Informing Design; 2.6 Key Issues Framing the Relationship; References; Chapter 3: Our Kind of Sociology; 3.1 Ethnography; 3.2 First Principles of an Ethnomethodological Approach; 3.2.1 Work; 3.2.2 Natural Accountability; 3.2.3 Reflexivity; 3.3 Studying Work; 3.3.1 Practical Action and Practical Reasoning; 3.3.2 Interactional Work; 3.3.3 Work Practice
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.3.4 The Machinery of Interaction3.4 The Ethnographer´s Task; 3.5 Practical Guidelines; References; Chapter 4: Finding the Animal in the Foliage; 4.1 The Methodical Character of Talk; 4.2 The Methodical Character of Asynchronous Action; 4.3 The Methodical Character of Synchronous Action; 4.4 The Methodical Character of Distributed Action; 4.5 Identifying Members´ Methods; 4.6 Practical Guidelines; References; Chapter 5: Dispensing with Method; 5.1 The Practical Necessity for Dispensation; 5.2 Professional Indifference; 5.3 The Unique Adequacy Requirement of Methods
    Description / Table of Contents: 5.4 Immersion in the Phenomenal Field5.5 Approaching Fieldwork in Design; 5.6 Tools and Resources; 5.6.1 Fieldnotes; 5.6.2 Interviews; 5.6.3 Audio-Visual Resources; 5.6.4 Physical Resources; 5.6.5 Digital Resources; 5.7 Practical Guidelines; References; Chapter 6: Doing Fieldwork; 6.1 Getting Access; 6.2 Gaining Acceptance; 6.3 Informed Consent; 6.4 Finding a Place to Start; 6.5 Fieldwork Demeanour and Effect; 6.6 Developing Vulgar Competence; 6.7 Unpacking Work; 6.8 Assembling the Ethnographic Record; 6.9 Getting Out; 6.10 Practical Guidelines; References
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 7: Analysing the Ethnographic Record7.1 Data; 7.2 Analysing a Setting´s Work; 7.3 Producing Analytic Accounts; 7.4 Thick Description; 7.5 Praxeological Accounts; 7.6 Making Use of Praxeological Accounts; 7.7 Practical Guidelines; References; Chapter 8: Informing Design; 8.1 Implications for Design; 8.2 Requirements Specification; 8.3 Developing System Models; 8.4 Sensitising Studies; 8.5 Scenario-Based Design; 8.6 Mock Ups and Prototypes; 8.7 Evaluation; 8.8 Assumption Testing; 8.9 The Importance of Collaboration; 8.10 Practical Guidelines; References
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 9: Some Common Misunderstandings, Objections and Complaints9.1 Method; 9.2 Common Sense; 9.3 Understanding the User; 9.4 Subjectivity; 9.5 Reproducibility; 9.6 Validity; 9.7 Time and Cost; 9.8 Current and Future; 9.9 Informing Design; 9.10 Beyond Work; 9.11 Anything Does Not Go; 9.12 Practical Guidelines; References; Chapter 10: Design Ethnography in a Nutshell; 10.1 The Turn to the Social in Systems Design; 10.2 Studying Work in the Wild; 10.3 Finding the Animal in the Foliage; 10.4 Dispensing with Method; 10.5 Assembling the Ethnographic Record
    Description / Table of Contents: 10.6 Thick Descriptions and Praxeological Accounts
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
    ISBN: 9783642227431
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXII, 105p. 33 illus., 13 illus. in color, digital)
    Series Statement: Theory and Applications of Natural Language Processing
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Petrov, Slav Coarse-to-fine natural language processing
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    Keywords: Computer Science ; Computer science ; Computer science ; Computational linguistics ; Statistical methods ; Natürliche Sprache ; Syntaktische Analyse ; Grammatik ; Latente Variable ; Maschinelles Lernen ; Automatische Spracherkennung ; Maschinelle Übersetzung ; Natürliche Sprache ; Syntaktische Analyse ; Grammatik ; Latente Variable ; Maschinelles Lernen ; Automatische Spracherkennung ; Maschinelle Übersetzung
    Abstract: 1.Introduction -- 2.Latent Variable Grammars for Natural Language Parsing -- 3.Discriminative Latent Variable Grammars -- 4.Structured Acoustic Models for Speech Recognition -- 5.Coarse-to-Fine Machine Translation Decoding -- 6.Conclusions and Future Work -- Bibliography
    Abstract: The impact of computer systems that can understand natural language will be tremendous. To develop this capability we need to be able to automatically and efficiently analyze large amounts of text. Manually devised rules are not sufficient to provide coverage to handle the complex structure of natural language, necessitating systems that can automatically learn from examples. To handle the flexibility of natural language, it has become standard practice to use statistical models, which assign probabilities for example to the different meanings of a word or the plausibility of grammatical constructions. This book develops a general coarse-to-fine framework for learning and inference in large statistical models for natural language processing. Coarse-to-fine approaches exploit a sequence of models which introduce complexity gradually. At the top of the sequence is a trivial model in which learning and inference are both cheap. Each subsequent model refines the previous one, until a final, full-complexity model is reached. Applications of this framework to syntactic parsing, speech recognition and machine translation are presented, demonstrating the effectiveness of the approach in terms of accuracy and speed. This book is intended for students and researchers interested in statistical approaches to Natural Language Processing. Slav’s work Coarse-to-Fine Natural Language Processing represents a major advance in the area of syntactic parsing, and a great advertisement for the superiority of the machine-learning approach. Eugene Charniak (Brown University)
    Description / Table of Contents: Coarse-to-Fine Natural Language Processing; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; Chapter 1 Introduction; 1.1 Coarse-to-Fine Models; 1.2 Coarse-to-Fine Inference; Chapter 2 Latent Variable Grammars for Natural Language Parsing; 2.1 Introduction; 2.1.1 Experimental Setup; 2.2 Manual Grammar Refinement; 2.2.1 Vertical and Horizontal Markovization; 2.2.2 Additional Linguistic Refinements; 2.3 Generative Latent Variable Grammars; 2.3.1 Hierarchical Estimation; 2.3.2 Adaptive Refinement; 2.3.3 Smoothing; 2.3.4 An Infinite Alternative; 2.4 Inference
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.4.1 Hierarchical Coarse-to-Fine Pruning2.4.1.1 Projections; 2.4.1.2 Estimating Projected Grammars; 2.4.1.3 Calculating Projected Expectations; 2.4.1.4 Hierarchical Projections; 2.4.1.5 Pruning Experiments; 2.4.2 Objective Functions for Parsing; 2.4.2.1 Minimum Bayes Risk Parsing; 2.4.2.2 Alternative Objective Functions; 2.5 Additional Experiments; 2.5.1 Experimental Setup; 2.5.2 Baseline Grammar Variation; 2.5.3 Final Results WSJ; 2.5.4 Multilingual Parsing; 2.5.5 Corpus Variation; 2.5.6 Training Size Variation; 2.6 Analysis; 2.6.1 Lexical Subcategories; 2.6.2 Phrasal Subcategories
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.6.3 Multilingual Analysis2.7 Summary and Future Work; Chapter 3 Discriminative Latent Variable Grammars; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Log-Linear Latent Variable Grammars; 3.3 Single-Scale Discriminative Grammars; 3.3.1 Efficient Discriminative Estimation; 3.3.1.1 Hierarchical Estimation; 3.3.1.2 Feature-Count Approximation; 3.3.2 Experiments; 3.3.2.1 Efficiency; 3.3.2.2 Regularization; 3.3.2.3 Final Test Set Results; 3.4 Multi-scale Discriminative Grammars; 3.4.1 Hierarchical Refinement; 3.4.2 Learning Sparse Multi-scale Grammars; 3.4.2.1 Hierarchical Training
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.4.2.2 Efficient Multi-scale Inference3.4.2.3 Feature Count Approximations; 3.4.3 Additional Features; 3.4.3.1 Unknown Word Features; 3.4.3.2 Span Features; 3.4.4 Experiments; 3.4.4.1 Sparsity; 3.4.4.2 Accuracy; 3.4.4.3 Efficiency; 3.4.4.4 Final Results; 3.4.5 Analysis; 3.5 Summary and Future Work; Chapter 4 Structured Acoustic Models for Speech Recognition; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Learning; 4.2.1 The Hand-Aligned Case; 4.2.2 Splitting; 4.2.3 Merging; 4.2.4 Smoothing; 4.2.5 The Automatically-Aligned Case; 4.3 Inference; 4.4 Experiments; 4.4.1 Phone Recognition; 4.4.2 Phone Classification
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.5 Analysis4.6 Summary and Future Work; Chapter 5 Coarse-to-Fine Machine Translation Decoding; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Coarse-to-Fine Decoding; 5.2.1 Related Work; 5.2.2 Language Model Projections; 5.2.3 Multipass Decoding; 5.3 Inversion Transduction Grammars; 5.4 Learning Coarse Languages; 5.4.1 Random Projections; 5.4.2 Frequency Clustering; 5.4.3 HMM Clustering; 5.4.4 JCluster; 5.4.5 Clustering Results; 5.5 Experiments; 5.5.1 Clustering; 5.5.2 Spacing; 5.5.3 Encoding Versus Order; 5.5.4 Final Results; 5.5.5 Search Error Analysis; 5.6 Summary and Future Work
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 6 Conclusions and Future Work
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 9
    ISBN: 9789048191789
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIV, 362p, digital)
    Series Statement: Text, Speech and Language Technology 42
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Genres on the Web
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    RVK:
    Keywords: Computer science ; Computer Science ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Computational linguistics ; Computational linguistics ; Computer science ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Maschinelle Übersetzung
    Abstract: The volume “Genres on the Web” has been designed for a wide audience, from the expert to the novice. It is a required book for scholars, researchers and students who want to become acquainted with the latest theoretical, empirical and computational advances in the expanding field of web genre research. The study of web genre is an overarching and interdisciplinary novel area of research that spans from corpus linguistics, computational linguistics, NLP, and text-technology, to web mining, webometrics, social network analysis and information studies. This book gives readers a thorough grounding in the latest research on web genres and emerging document types. The book covers a wide range of web-genre focussed subjects, such as: • The identification of the sources of web genres • Automatic web genre identification • The presentation of structure-oriented models • Empirical case studies One of the driving forces behind genre research is the idea of a genre-sensitive information system, which incorporates genre cues complementing the current keyword-based search and retrieval applications
    URL: Cover
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
    ISBN: 9783642175251
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (X, 294p. 60 illus, digital)
    Series Statement: Theory and Applications of Natural Language Processing
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Interactive multi-modal question-answering
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    Keywords: Information storage and retrieval systems ; Computer Science ; Computer science ; Multimedia systems ; Information storage and retrieva ; Computer science ; Information storage and retrieval systems ; Multimedia systems ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Frage-Antwort-System ; Multimodales System ; Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation ; Natürlichsprachiges System ; Medizin ; Dialogsystem ; Information Extraction ; Textanalyse
    Abstract: Part I Introduction to the IMIX Programme -- Introduction. Antal van den Bosch and Gosse Bouma -- IMIX: Good Questions, Promising Answers. Eduard Hovy, Jon Oberlander, and Norbert Reithinger -- The IMIX demonstrator: an information search assistant for the medical domain. Dennis Hofs and Boris van Schooten and Rieks op den Akker -- Part II Interaction Management -- Vidiam: Corpus-based Development of a Dialogue Manager for Multimodal Question Answering. Boris van Schooten and Rieks op den Akker -- Multidimensional Dialogue Management. Simon Keizer, Harry Bunt, and Volha Petukhova -- Part III Fusing Text, Speech, and Images. Experiments in Multimodal Information Presentation. Charlotte van Hooijdonk, Wauter Bosma, Emiel Krahmer, Alfons Maes, and Mariët Theune -- Text-to-text generation for question answering. Wauter Bosma, Erwin Marsi, Emiel Krahmer and Mariët Theune -- Part IV Text Analysis for Question Answering Automatic Extraction of Medical Term Variants from Mutilingual Parallel Translations. Lonneke van der Plas, Jörg Tiedemann, and Ismail Fahmi -- Relation Extraction for Open and Closed Domain Question Answering . Gosse Bouma, Ismail Fahmi, and Jori Mur -- Constraint-Satisfaction Inference for Entity Recognition. Sander Canisius, Antal van den Bosch, and Walter Daelemans -- Extraction of Hypernymy Information from Text. Erik Tjong Kim Sang, Katja Hofmann and Maarten de Rijke.-Towards a Discourse-driven Taxonomic Inference Model . Piroska Lendvai
    Abstract: This book is the result of a group of researchers from different disciplines asking themselves one question: what does it take to develop a computer interface that listens, talks, and can answer questions in a domain? First, obviously, it takes specialized modules for speech recognition and synthesis, human interaction management (dialogue, input fusion, andmultimodal output fusion), basic question understanding, and answer finding. While all modules are researched as independent subfields, this book describes the development of state-of-the-art modules and their integration into a single, working application capable of answering medical (encyclopedic) questions such as "How long is a person with measles contagious?" or "How can I prevent RSI?". The contributions in this book, which grew out of the IMIX project funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, document the development of this system, but also address more general issues in natural language processing, such as the development of multidimensional dialogue systems, the acquisition of taxonomic knowledge from text, answer fusion, sequence processing for domain-specific entity recognition, and syntactic parsing for question answering. Together, they offer an overview of the most important findings and lessons learned in the scope of the IMIX project, making the book of interest to both academic and commercial developers of human-machine interaction systems in Dutch or any other language. Highlights include: integrating multi-modal input fusion in dialogue management (Van Schooten and Op den Akker), state-of-the-art approaches to the extraction of term variants (Van der Plas, Tiedemann, and Fahmi; Tjong Kim Sang, Hofmann, and De Rijke), and multi-modal answer fusion (two chapters by Van Hooijdonk, Bosma, Krahmer, Maes, Theune, and Marsi). Watch the IMIX movie at www.nwo.nl/imix-film . Like IBM's Watson, the IMIX system described in the book gives naturally phrased responses to naturally posed questions. Where Watson can only generate synthetic speech, the IMIX system also recognizes speech. On the other hand, Watson is able to win a television quiz, while the IMIX system is domain-specific, answering only to medical questions. "The Netherlands has always been one of the leaders in the general field of Human Language Technology, and IMIX is no exception. It was a very ambitious program, with a remarkably successful performance leading to interesting results. The teams covered a rema ...
    Description / Table of Contents: pt. 1. Introduction to the IMIX programme -- pt. 2. Interaction management -- pt. 3. Fusing text, speech, and images -- pt. 4. Text analysis for question answering -- pt. 5. Epilogue.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9783642249426
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XV, 253p. 50 illus., 27 illus. in color, digital)
    Series Statement: Theory and Applications of Natural Language Processing
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Rieser, Verena Reinforcement learning for adaptive dialogue systems
    RVK:
    Keywords: Computer Science ; Computer science ; Artificial intelligence ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Computer science ; Artificial intelligence ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation ; Dialogsystem ; Natürlichsprachiges System ; Multimodales System ; Lernendes System ; Bestärkendes Lernen ; Benutzerverhalten ; Simulation ; Automatische Sprachproduktion ; Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation ; Dialogsystem ; Natürlichsprachiges System ; Multimodales System ; Lernendes System ; Bestärkendes Lernen ; Benutzerverhalten ; Simulation ; Automatische Sprachproduktion
    Abstract: 1.Introduction -- 2.Background -- 3.Reinforcement Learning for Information Seeking dialogue strategies -- 4.The bootstrapping approach to developing Reinforcement Learning-based strategies -- 5.Data Collection in aWizard-of-Oz experiment -- 6.Building a simulated learning environment from Wizard-of-Oz data -- 7.Comparing Reinforcement and Supervised Learning of dialogue policies with real users -- 8.Meta-evaluation -- 9.Adaptive Natural Language Generation -- 10.Conclusion -- References -- Example Dialogues -- A.1.Wizard-of-Oz Example Dialogues -- A.2.Example Dialogues from Simulated Interaction -- A.3.Example Dialogues from User Testing -- Learned State-Action Mappings -- Index
    Abstract: The past decade has seen a revolution in the field of spoken dialogue systems. As in other areas of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence, data-driven methods are now being used to drive new methodologies for system development and evaluation. This book is a unique contribution to that ongoing change. A new methodology for developing spoken dialogue systems is described in detail. The journey starts and ends with human behaviour in interaction, and explores methods for learning from the data, for building simulation environments for training and testing systems, and for evaluating the results. The detailed material covers: Spoken and Multimodal dialogue systems, Wizard-of-Oz data collection, User Simulation methods, Reinforcement Learning, and Evaluation methodologies. The book is a research guide for students and researchers with a background in Computer Science, AI, or Machine Learning. It navigates through a detailed case study in data-driven methods for development and evaluation of spoken dialogue systems. Common challenges associated with this approach are discussed and example solutions are provided. This work provides insights, lessons, and inspiration for future research and development - not only for spoken dialogue systems in particular, but for data-driven approaches to human-machine interaction in general
    Description / Table of Contents: Reinforcement Learning for Adaptive Dialogue Systems; Preface; Acknowledgements; Contents; Acronyms; Chapter 1 Introduction; 1.1 The Design Problem for Spoken Dialogue Systems; 1.2 Overview; 1.3 Structure of the Book; Chapter 2 (Background); Chapter 3 (Reinforcement Learning); Chapter 4 (Proof-of-Concept: Information Seeking Strategies); Chapter 5 (A Bootstrapping Approach to Develop Reinforcement Learning-based Strategies); Chapter 6 (Data Collection in aWizard-of-Oz Experiment); Chapter 7 (Building a Simulated Learning Environment from Wizard-of-Oz Data)
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 8 (Comparing Reinforcement and Supervised Learning of Dialogue Policies with Real Users)Chapter 9 (Natural Language Generation); Chapter 10 (Conclusion); Part I Fundamental Concepts; Chapter 2 Background; 2.1 Human-Computer Interaction; 2.2 Dialogue Strategy Development; 2.2.1 Conventional Development Lifecycle; 2.2.2 Evaluation and Strategy Quality Control; 2.2.2.1 Quality Control in Industry; 2.2.2.2 Evaluation Practises in Academia; 2.2.2.3 The PARADISE Evaluation Framework; 2.2.2.4 Strategy Re-Implementation; 2.2.3 Strategy Implementation
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.2.3.1 Implementation Practises in Industry2.2.3.2 Implementation Practises in Academia; 2.2.4 Challenges for Strategy Development; 2.3 Literature review: Learning Dialogue Strategies; 2.3.1 Machine Learning Paradigms; 2.3.2 Supervised Learning for Dialogue Strategies; 2.3.3 Dialogue as Decision Making under Uncertainty; 2.3.4 Reinforcement Learning for Dialogue Strategies; 2.4 Summary; Chapter 3 Reinforcement Learning; 3.1 The Nature of Dialogue Interaction; 3.1.1 Dialogue is Temporal; 3.1.2 Dialogue is Dynamic; 3.2 Reinforcement Learning-based Dialogue Strategy Learning
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.2.1 Dialogue as a Markov Decision Process3.2.1.1 Representing Dialogue as a Markov Decision Process; 3.2.1.2 Partially Observable Markov Decision Processes for Strategy Learning; 3.2.2 The Reinforcement Learning Problem; 3.2.2.1 Elements of Reinforcement Learning; 3.2.2.2 Algorithms for Reinforcement Learning; 3.2.2.3 The Curse of Dimensionality, and State Space Reduction; 3.2.3 Model-based vs. Simulation-based Strategy Learning; 3.2.3.1 Model-based Reinforcement Learning; 3.2.3.2 Simulation-based Reinforcement Learning; 3.3 Dialogue Simulation; 3.3.1 Wizard-of-Oz Studies
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.3.2 Computer-based Simulations3.3.3 Discussion; 3.4 Application Domains; 3.4.1 Information-Seeking Dialogue Systems; 3.4.2 Multimodal Output Planning and Information Presentation; 3.4.3 Multimodal Dialogue Systems for In-Car Digital Music Players; 3.5 Summary; Chapter 4 Proof-of-Concept: Information Seeking Strategies; 4.1 Introduction; 4.1.1 A Proof-of-Concept Study; 4.2 Simulated Learning Environments; 4.2.1 Problem Representation; 4.2.2 Database Retrieval Simulations; 4.2.2.1 Monotonic Database Simulation; 4.2.2.2 Random Database Simulation; 4.2.3 Noise Model; 4.2.4 User Simulations
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.2.5 Objective and Reward Function
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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  • 12
    ISBN: 9781402030758
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXVIII, 403 p, digital)
    Edition: Springer eBook Collection. Humanities, Social Science and Law
    Series Statement: Text, Speech and Language Technology 28
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Spoken multimodal human-computer dialogue in mobile environments
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Linguistics ; Multimedia systems ; Computer science ; Translators (Computer programs) ; Computational linguistics ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Mensch ; Computer ; Dialog ; Mensch-Maschine-Kommunikation ; Mobile Computing
    Abstract: Issues in Multimodal Spoken Dialogue Systems and Components -- Multimodal Dialogue Systems -- Speech Recognition Technology in Multimodal/Ubiquitous Computing Environments -- A Robust Multimodal Speech Recognition Method using Optical Flow Analysis -- Feature Functions for Tree-Based Dialogue Course Management -- A Reasoning Component for Information-Seeking and Planning Dialogues -- A Model for Multimodal Dialogue System Output Applied to an Animated Talking Head -- System Architecture and Example Implemesntations -- Overview of System Architecture -- XISL: A Modality-Independent MMI Description Language -- A Path to Multimodal Data Services for Telecommunications -- Multimodal Spoken Dialogue with Wireless Devices -- The Smartkom Mobile Car Prototype System for Flexible Human-Machine Communication -- LARRI: A Language-Based Maintenance and Repair Assistant -- Evaluation and Usability -- Overview of Evaluation and Usability -- Evaluating Dialogue Strategies in Multimodal Dialogue Systems -- Enhancing the Usability of Multimodal Virtual Co-drivers -- Design, Implementation and Evaluation of the SENECA Spoken Language Dialogue System -- Segmenting Route Descriptions for Mobile Devices -- Effects of Prolonged Use on the Usability of a Multimodal Form-Filling Interface -- User Multitasking with Mobile Multimodal Systems -- Speech Convergence with Animated Personas
    Abstract: This book is based on publications from the ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop on Multi-Modal Dialogue in Mobile Environments held at Kloster Irsee, Germany, in 2002. The workshop covered various aspects of devel- ment and evaluation of spoken multimodal dialogue systems and components with particular emphasis on mobile environments, and discussed the state-- the-art within this area. On the development side the major aspects addressed include speech recognition, dialogue management, multimodal output gene- tion, system architectures, full applications, and user interface issues. On the evaluation side primarily usability evaluation was addressed. A number of high quality papers from the workshop were selected to form the basis of this book. The volume is divided into three major parts which group together the ov- all aspects covered by the workshop. The selected papers have all been - tended, reviewed and improved after the workshop to form the backbone of the book. In addition, we have supplemented each of the three parts by an invited contribution intended to serve as an overview chapter
    URL: Cover
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9783540209232
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2934
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Lecture notes in computer science
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Regulated agent-based social systems
    DDC: 303.4834
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    Keywords: Artificial intelligence ; Computer Communication Networks ; Computer science ; Computer simulation ; Social sciences_xData processing ; Computer Science ; Konferenzschrift 2002 ; Mehragentensystem ; Autonomer Agent ; Soziales System ; Selbst organisierendes System
    URL: Cover
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  • 14
    Book
    Book
    Stevenage, Herts. : Peregrinus
    ISBN: 0863412319
    Language: English
    Pages: VI, 301 S. , Ill., graph. Darst. , 25 cm
    Series Statement: IEE Control Engineering series 43
    DDC: 303.4833
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic data processing ; Computer science ; Information technology ; Information systems ; Information storage and retrieval systems ; Information storage and retrieval systems
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