User States, User Strategies, and System Performance: How to Match the One with the Other

Batliner A, Hacker C, Steidl S, Nöth E, Haas J (2003)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Conference contribution, Conference Contribution

Publication year: 2003

Original Authors: Batliner Anton, Hacker Christian, Steidl Stefan, Nöth Elmar, Haas Jürgen

Publisher: ISCA

City/Town: -

Pages Range: 5-10

Conference Proceedings Title: Proc. of an ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop on Error Handling in Spoken Dialogue Systems

Event location: Chateau d'Oex CH

URI: http://www5.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/Forschung/Publikationen/2003/Batliner03-USU.pdf

Abstract

Apart from the ‘normal’ linguistic information entailed in user utterances – segmental (phone/word) information and syntactic/semantic information – there is additional information (supra-segmental and para-linguistic) that can be useful for deciding whether an automatic dialogue system performs well or not. In this paper, we want to deal with such additional information and correlate it with system performance. Moreover, we will examine whether prosodic peculiarities influence word recognition.

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How to cite

APA:

Batliner, A., Hacker, C., Steidl, S., Nöth, E., & Haas, J. (2003). User States, User Strategies, and System Performance: How to Match the One with the Other. In ISCA (Eds.), Proc. of an ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop on Error Handling in Spoken Dialogue Systems (pp. 5-10). Chateau d'Oex, CH: -: ISCA.

MLA:

Batliner, Anton, et al. "User States, User Strategies, and System Performance: How to Match the One with the Other." Proceedings of the ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop on Error Handling in Spoken Dialogue Systems, Chateau d'Oex Ed. ISCA, -: ISCA, 2003. 5-10.

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