LINGUIST List 15.738

Sun Feb 29 2004

Review: Pragmatics/Comp Ling: K�hnlein et al. (2003)

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  • Mart� Quixal, Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millenium

    Message 1: Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millenium

    Date: Sun, 29 Feb 2004 14:44:31 -0500 (EST)
    From: Mart� Quixal <marti.quixalupf.edu>
    Subject: Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millenium


    EDITOR: K�hnlein, Peter; Rieser, Hannes; Zeevat, Henk TITLE: Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millennium SERIES: Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 114 PUBLISHER: John Benjamins YEAR: 2003

    Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/14/14-2815.html

    Mart� Quixal Mart�nez, Grup de Ling��stica Computacional, Departament de Traducci� i Interpretaci�, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

    ''Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millennium'' is a selection of 19 papers out of the 30 papers that were presented during BI-DIALOG (a meeting point for researchers trying to further understand dialog, as well as generating applicational spin-offs), held in Bielefeld in 2001. According to the book's editors, they contain (in some cases dramatic) changes with respect to the original ones. The book seems to be appropriate for readers with a minimum background knowledge in both theoretical semantics and pragmatics, and their computational counterparts. It is far from being an introduction to dialog (systems), neither from a theoretical standpoint, nor from an implementational standpoint. However, it is for sure a representative collection of papers that ''documents the busy development in the field of research on dialog'' (in the editors' words).

    The disciplines that can be more clearly distinguished as taking part in the development of dialog theory and praxis are: theoretical and computational semantics and pragmatics, artificial intelligence and computer science, and a range of disciplines that could be gathered under the label cognitive sciences (or to how humans conceive the state or situation of things). All of them are represented in this volume.

    The first three papers are devoted to the study of strategies or formalisms to account for the inter-relation among semantics, pragmatics and the construction of knowledge:

    The first one of them is written by A. Lascarides and N. Asher, and is entitled ''Imperatives in dialogue''. Their main point is the utilization of a dynamic discourse semantics in order to capture discourse effects as a by- product of discourse update. The dynamicity of semantics is assured by the semantic definition and formalisation of rhetorical relations such as narration, (default)- consequence, explanation, correction, etc. Their proposal is formalised in Segmented Discourse Representation Theory (SDRT). In this paper, the authors defend a modular approach for the modelling of reasoning, which is ''an attempt to do justice to the complexity of interaction between the information sources that contribute to interpretation''.

    The second paper is written by J. Ginzburg, I. Sag and M. Purver, and is entitled ''Integrating conversational move types in the grammar of conversation''. The paper argues in favour of integrating conversational move types (CMT) in grammatical analysis of conversation --within the framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Their inclusion of CMTs in grammar analysis is based on both lexical and pragmatic facts --though they admit certain points are still to be further clarified. The enlarging of the formalism consists --among others-- in introducing a type ''illocutionary-rel'' as part of the HPSG type hierarchy, and a set of derivation constraints.

    The third paper is written by C. Sassen, and is entitled ''An HPSG-based representation model for illocutionary acts in crisis talk''. This paper focuses on explaining and implementing illocutionary acts in spontaneous speech. The author extends the semantics of HPSG in order to handle illocutionary acts in crisis talk. Her extension includes a set of rules for handling the distance between an utterance, its meaning, and its logical form. She enlarges the SEM-attribute with pieces of information such as point, presupposition(s), sincerity, strength, etc. Thus incorporating some of the Searlean conversation principles.

    The following eight papers are related to rather (linguistic-)theoretical aspects of dialogue. Speech acts is the connecting theme among the first four of them: three of them are related to presuppositions and the last one is devoted to how certain speech acts can be considered part of semantics. The second four papers (of this group of eight) are devoted to miscellaneous aspects related to the explanation of human dialogue: politeness as a perlocutionary act, models of intentions, context dependent interpretation and implicit dialogue acts, and linguistic non-linguistic context.

    The fourth paper (in absolute figures) is written by R. van der Sandt, and is entitled ''Denial and presupposition''. The main goal of this paper is to shed some light in the formalisation and conceptualisation of presupposition denials. The author distinguishes between denials and negations as two different concepts. Denial is opposed to assertion, and negative sentences are confronted with positive ones. Both denials and assertions may be achieved (as speech act concepts) by any of the two types of sentences (positive or negative). He presents two possible accounts of presupposition denial, which in his view differ conceptually in the fact that one of them (the echo-analysis) ''attributes the effect [of presupposition denials] to the discourse function of negatory force'' while the other one (the anaphoric theory of presupposition) supports a treatment of ''presuppositional expressions as anaphoric expressions''. The modularity and further generalization power of the first makes him adopt. In addition, he admits that ''a formal implementation of his proposal [in DRT] would require a non-trivial extension of the DRT apparatus.

    The fifth paper is written by J. Spenader, and is entitled ''Between binding and accommodation''. The main goal of this paper is to analyse whether there is a need to distinguish binding, bridging and accommodation as three different operations. For such purpose, the author reviews several of the proposals made in that respect (grouping them in lexical or encyclopaedic based approaches and functional based approaches) and a series of (bridging) annotation studies. Eventually, she presents some work conducted in the annotation of certain discourse strategies on spoken language data, looking for a complementation of the annotation work done for written text, as well as for validation of the presented theories. After going over a number of interesting and picky examples, she concludes that ''bridging examples are very different from binding and accommodation''. However, she proposes that bridging should be newly defined, for which she herself gives a (provisional) definition, specially in order to better capture aspects such as under- and over- generation of anchors or links when looking for concrete samples of bridging relations.

    The sixth paper is written by A. Capone, and is entitled ''Theories of presuppositions and presuppositional clitics''. This paper is divided in two parts. The first one is a miscellaneous overview of some aspects regarding presupposition theory, where some of the proposed theories for presupposition projection, and its main features and some problems are mentioned. The second part, not consistently related to the first one (in my view), handles some aspects about presuppositional clitics, by which is meant the (im)possibility of using clitics in certain discourse contexts (examples from Italian).

    The seventh paper is written by E. Oishi, and is entitled ''Semantic meaning and four types of speech act''. The author considers the question regarding truth-conditional meaning and non-truth-conditional meaning. In contrast to previous theories, she proposes that by extending the scope of semantic meaning straightforward truth- conditional meaning can be regarded as a kind of conventional meaning. Inspired in Austin (1953), the author hypothesizes the existence of four different speech acts (stating, placing, casting and instancing) which help her explaining some differences between both truth- conditional meaning and non-truth-conditional meaning remaining at the level of semantics.

    The eighth paper is written by M. Terkourafi, and is entitled ''Generalised and particularised implicatures of linguistic politeness''. It basically dwells on the several linguistic strategies used in order to communicate and understand politeness. The author analyses how implicatures of politeness can be calculated in several contexts, and eventually concludes that particularised implicatures can be drawn at several stages in the inferential process, but this is not the case for generalised (politeness) implicatures that arise from conventionalised language uses.

    The ninth paper is written by W. Mann, and is entitled ''Models of intentions in language''. The goal of this paper is to encourage researchers in the field of intentions modelling to set aside the idea that one model of intentions suffices for explaining the number of observable communicative situations (labelled by its author as the Single Comprehensive Model Fallacy). In contrast, the author supports the elaboration of partial models, although he acknowledges the need for determining aspects such as sets of attributes of intentions, or devices in order to establish which models would more advisable to be used in certain communicative contexts.

    The tenth paper is written by J. Kreutel and C. Matheson, and is entitled ''Context-dependent interpretation and implicit dialogue acts''. The paper theorizes and presents an algorithm for dealing with implicit acceptance acts in dialogue modelling. Their algorithm (formalised and implemented as an extension of the work done in the TRINDI project) assigns context dependent dialogue acts using certain update rules, context-(in)dependent interpretation rules, and context accommodation rules for handling information states. Their claim is that dialogue participants do act even in situations where they do not seem to be intending, whereas the representation of obligations provides means for determining characteristic states in the course of dialogue.

    The eleventh paper is written by K. Fischer, and is entitled ''Notes on analysing context''. This paper focuses on ''how speaker make use of contextual factors in human- robot communication''. It briefly overviews motivation and previous studies regarding the need of handling context in dialogue situations. Moreover, it presents the analysis of an experiment by which 15 different subjects were asked to interact with a robot, where the goal was to make the robot move to certain places within the experimentation room. The author looks for a matching between a theory previously proposed by Clark (1996) and the observations arising from the experimental situation, and eventually draws some interesting conclusions regarding the corroboration of Clark's classification.

    Although some of the previous systems where framed within the implementation of human-machine dialogue systems, none of them was a presentation in itself of such a system. The following five papers are centred on the development of human-machine dialogue systems.

    The twelfth paper is written by A. Knoll, and is entitled ''A basic system for multimodal robot instruction''. The paper briefly sketches some theoretical aspects regarding the incorporation of natural language in architectures for human-robot interaction (front-end approach vs. communicator or incremental approach). In addition, it presents an experiment in which human subjects are asked to communicate with a robot so that the machine finally builds up a series of elements of a toy construction set. Interestingly the system incorporates multimodal interaction, which results, according the results, in a ''very natural way'' of communication.

    The thirteenth paper is written by O. Lemon, A. Bracy, A. Gruenstein and S. Peters, and is entitled ''An information state approach in a multi-modal dialogue system for human- robot conversation''. This paper discusses several aspects regarding multimodal human-robot conversations. In addition, it presents the architecture of the Open Agent Architecture, which incorporates from a speech recognition system to an interactive map display over speech synthesis, linguistic parsing and language generation modules. An interesting aspect of the system is that by means of updating information states it manages to a more flexible strategy for modelling and processing conversations.

    The fourteenth paper is written by B. Ludwig, and is entitled ''Dialogue understanding in dynamic domains''. This paper presents a strategy for computing dialogue situations from a pragmatics first perspective within dynamic applications. This research work relies on the idea that dialogue can be determined ''by dynamically changing content of the belief structures of the dialogue participants. The implementation bases on a set of minimal set of communicative acts and a number of orthogonal conditions for updating belief structures in order to compute dialogue progress.

    The fifteenth paper is written by R. Copper, S. Ericsson, Staffan Larson and I. Lewin, and is entitled ''An information state update approach to collaborative negotiation''. The paper presents a strategy for dealing with collaborative negotiation within a GoDiS implementation. The authors start by analyzing a previous proposal --Sidner (1994),-- and try to overcome some of its shortcomings. Their proposal reduces considerably the number of dialogue moves needed to handle the (sub-)domain presented in the paper --only four central primitive moves are needed. In addition, their proposal is flexible with respect to the degree of optimism (or pessimism) with which participant's contributions have to be interpreted. Last but not least, they introduce a distinction between negotiation of alternatives and negotiation of uptake, for which they point out a feasible solution.

    The sixteenth paper is written by D. Schlangen, A. Lascarides and A. Copestake, and is entitled ''Resolving Underspecification using Discourse Information''. The paper aims at investigating the interaction between compositional semantics, goals, and discourse structure in task-oriented dialogues, namely in the domain of fixing appointments. Their main thesis is that information can flow either from resolving the semantic underspecification to computing the rhetorical relation, or vice versa. The proposal is in the framework of Segmented Discourse Representation Theory and is implemented using LKB.

    The last three papers centre on theoretical aspects of dialogue formalisation. The first one of them centres on the interpretation of coordinated sentences, whereas the two following ones are centred on the use of specific discourse markers both in German and English.

    The seventeenth paper is written by A. Benz, and is entitled ''On coordinating interpretations -- optimality theory and rational interaction''. The author tries to clarify the relation between a model approaching anaphora resolution within a theory of rational interaction and bidirectional Optimality Theory. It defends that anaphora resolution can be seen as a translation problem where a set of ''original'' sentences must be handled with a set of translating formulas. The result of such an operation must be a balance between a best form chosen by the speaker and a most preferred meaning chosen by the listener. The whole process is conducted and determined by the communicative situation and the dialogue state.

    The eighteenth paper is written by E. Karagjosova, and is entitled ''Modal particles and the common ground''. The paper centres on the analysis of the meaning of certain German modal particles. The author tries to distinguish the amount of inherent meaning in such modal particles from that amount of meaning that they acquire in context. Finally the author suggests that the contribution of the modal particles to utterance meaning can be captured by framework that considers the basic meaning of the particle, the illocution of the utterance the modal particle occurs in, and the function of the utterance in discourse.

    The nineteenth paper is written by T. Tenbrink & F. Schilder, and is entitled ''(Non-)Temporal concepts conveyed by before, after, and then in dialogue''. The papers aims at analyzing the use of before, after and then as indicators of temporal order. They review previous analyses, and explore some corpora in order to check real uses. They eventually conclude that there is clear presence of time sense in the use of such words, either precedence or proximality. Moreover, they prove that discourse relations are required for determining the semantics of those words. Finally, they conclude that the presence of a time reference shall have effects on their interpretation.

    REFERENCES

    Austin, J.L. (1953) How to talk -- some simple ways. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. [Reprinted in: J.O. Urmson & G.J. Warnock (Eds.), Philosophical papers (pp. 134-135). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

    Clark (1996) Using language. Cambridge University Press.

    Sidner (1994) An artificial discourse language for collborative negotiation. In Proceedings of the fourteenth National Conference of the American Association for Artificail Intelligence (AAAI-94) (pp. 814-819)

    ABOUT THE REVIEWER

    Mart� Quixal is PhD student in the program Cognitive Science and Language at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona. He works at the GLiCom research group http://mutis.upf.es/glicom in the development of robust low-level linguistics-based parsers. He is currently working in the implementation of NLP-enhanced error detection tools for second language learners, and is interested in introducing partial semantic or pragmatic information in texts in order to detect errors beyond the morphosyntactic level.