During dialog, references are presented, accepted, and potentially reused (depending on their accessibility in memory). Two experiments were conducted to examine reuse in a naturalistic setting (a walk in a familiar environment). In Experiment 1, where the participants interacted face to face, self-presented references and references accepted through verbatim repetition were reused more. Such biases persisted after the end of the interaction. In Experiment 2, where the participants interacted over the phone, reference reuse mainly depended on whether the participant could see the landmarks being referred to, although this bias seemed to be only transient. Consistent with the memory-based approach to dialog, these results shed light on how d...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
The author presents an analysis of how speakers establish references in conversation. Further, this ...
Words that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered better than words tha...
As speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they can then reuse to facil...
International audienceNot all pieces of information mentioned during an interaction are equally acce...
Dialogue participants often refer to entities or situations repeatedly within a conversation, which ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
When speakers in dialogue are faced with the need to repeatedly refer to the same items, they usual...
International audienceIn human–human dialogue, the way in which a piece of information is added to t...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Lexical Selection in Reference: Introductory Exa...
International audienceTwo experiments investigated how both shared and privileged knowledge affect r...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Interlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker might refer to a novel ...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
The author presents an analysis of how speakers establish references in conversation. Further, this ...
Words that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered better than words tha...
As speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they can then reuse to facil...
International audienceNot all pieces of information mentioned during an interaction are equally acce...
Dialogue participants often refer to entities or situations repeatedly within a conversation, which ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
When speakers in dialogue are faced with the need to repeatedly refer to the same items, they usual...
International audienceIn human–human dialogue, the way in which a piece of information is added to t...
Reference is important in everyday interactions: people can only exchange information about objects ...
This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Lexical Selection in Reference: Introductory Exa...
International audienceTwo experiments investigated how both shared and privileged knowledge affect r...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Interlocutors converge on names to refer to entities. For example, a speaker might refer to a novel ...
Traditional computational approaches to referring expression generation operate in a deliberate mann...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2012.Successful conver...
The author presents an analysis of how speakers establish references in conversation. Further, this ...