Masahiro Araki’s research while affiliated with Kyoto Institute of Technology and other places

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Publications (11)


Spoken, Multilingual and Multimodal Dialogue Systems: Development and Assessment
  • Book

March 2006

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1 Read

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74 Citations

Ramón López‐Cózar Delgado

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Masahiro Araki

Multilingual Dialogue Systems

March 2006

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77 Reads

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16 Citations

Implications of Multilinguality in the Architecture of Dialogue SystemsMultilingual Dialogue Systems Based on InterlinguaMultilingual Dialogue Systems Based on Web ApplicationsSummaryFurther Reading


Introduction to Dialogue Systems

March 2006

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564 Reads

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55 Citations

Dialogue systems are a very appealing technology with an extraordinary future. Spoken, Multilingual and Multimodal Dialogues Systems: Development and Assessment addresses the great demand for information about the development of advanced dialogue systems combining speech with other modalities under a multilingual framework. It aims to give a systematic overview of dialogue systems and recent advances in the practical application of spoken dialogue systems. Spoken Dialogue Systems are computer-based systems developed to provide information and carry out simple tasks using speech as the interaction mode. Examples include travel information and reservation, weather forecast information, directory information and product order. Multimodal Dialogue Systems aim to overcome the limitations of spoken dialogue systems which use speech as the only communication means, while Multilingual Systems allow interaction with users that speak different languages. Presents a clear snapshot of the structure of a standard dialogue system, by addressing its key components in the context of multilingual and multimodal interaction and the assessment of spoken, multilingual and multimodal systems In addition to the fundamentals of the technologies employed, the development and evaluation of these systems are described Highlights recent advances in the practical application of spoken dialogue systems This comprehensive overview is a must for graduate students and academics in the fields of speech recognition, speech synthesis, speech processing, language, and human-computer interaction technolgy. It will also prove to be a valuable resource to system developers working in these areas.









Citations (4)


... Shuni ham ta'kidlash lozimki, ba'zi lingvistlar noverbal vositalarning sintaktik vazifalarini ham qayd etishgan. Chunonchi, I.N.Gorelov va K.F.Sedovning ta'kidlashicha, muloqotning noverbal qismlari gap bo'laklari vazifalarini bajarishi mumkin: ega, hol, kesim, vositali va vositasiz to'ldiruvchi kabi vazifalar 82 . Shuningdek, N.V.Nakashidzening qayd etishicha, muloqot jarayonida noverbal vositalar quyidagi kommunikativ vazifalarni bajaradi: nutqiy jarayonda lisoniy vositalarga hamroh bo'lish va nutqiy jarayonda alohida qo'llanish 83 . ...

Reference:

monografiya. nashri
Spoken, Multilingual and Multimodal Dialogue Systems: Development and Assessment
  • Citing Book
  • March 2006

... Such analytics can also be applied to multi-modal speech mobile applications since the purpose of such applications typically involved multi-step interaction or multi-turn searches. Recent work on evaluation frameworks for multi-modal systems has mostly been in the context of usability studies and evaluation questions, [7], [8] and [9]. This paper is organized as follows: Section 2 describes the multi-modal dialog framework used to build the multimodal food tracking application that was used to evaluate the proposed evaluation framework as part of a week-long usability study. ...

Multilingual Dialogue Systems
  • Citing Chapter
  • March 2006

... In these futuristic scenarios, it is envisioned that spoken language will provide a " natural " conversational interface between human beings and the so-called intelligent systems. However, many challenges need to be addressed in order to meet such a requirement (Baker et al., 2009a; Moore, 2013 Moore, , 2015 ), not least how to evolve the complexity of voice-based interfaces from simple structured dialogs to more flexible conversational designs without confusing the user (Bernsen et al., 1998; McTear, 2004; Lopez Cozar Delgado and Araki, 2005; Phillips and Philips, 2006; Moore, 2016b). In particular, seminal work by Nass and Brave (2005) showed how attention needs to be paid to users' expectations [e.g., selecting the " gender " of a system's voice (Crowell et al., 2009)], and this has inspired work on " empathic " vocal robots (Breazeal, 2003; Fellous and Arbib, 2005; Haring et al., 2011; Eyssel et al., 2012; Lim and Okuno, 2014; Crumpton and Bethel, 2016). ...

Introduction to Dialogue Systems
  • Citing Chapter
  • March 2006