The author presents an analysis of how speakers establish references in conversation. Further, this paper focuses on what words of a reference are conventionalized as speakers coordinate multiple times. The author explores how the co-occurrence of the reference terms with the referent can be a good predictor of what words are conventionalized over time. In order to study this, the author created an online version of the reference game from Clark and Wilkes-Gibbs (1986) experiment, where a matcher and director must describe a set of ambiguous shapes to each other many times. By creating an online version of this reference game the author was able to gather significantly more data and analyze the data with computational tools. Results prove t...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
International audienceWords that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
© 2018 Association for Computational Linguistics. Simple reference games (Wittgenstein, 1953) are of...
According to the Clark & Wilkes-Gibbs' collaborative model of reference, the repetition of a referen...
From classrooms to dinner parties, many of our everyday conversations take place in larger groups wh...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
As speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they can then reuse to facil...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
International audienceFollowing the methodological approach of multimodal conversation analysis, our...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
International audienceWords that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
© 2018 Association for Computational Linguistics. Simple reference games (Wittgenstein, 1953) are of...
According to the Clark & Wilkes-Gibbs' collaborative model of reference, the repetition of a referen...
From classrooms to dinner parties, many of our everyday conversations take place in larger groups wh...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
As speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they can then reuse to facil...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
International audienceFollowing the methodological approach of multimodal conversation analysis, our...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
International audienceWords that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...