rapaport@sunybcs (William J. Rapaport) (02/23/88)
UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM The Architecture of Discourse Systems Dr. James Allen Department of Computer Science University of Rochester A system that can understand and partake in an extended dialog must be comprised of many diverse processing mechan- isms: syntactic and semantic analysis, reference analysis, speech act analysis, the recognition of the other speakers plans and goals, the identification of topic structure, and much more to do with generating appropriate responses. While there has been alot of work in the last decade on each of these problems, there has been very little work concerned with how each process can be integrated into a complete sys- tem. In this talk I will summarize some of work done in the areas of reference, speech act analysis, plan recognition and discourse structure and then suggest how this work might be integrated into a complete system capable of participat- ing in an extended two-person dialog. This framework is currently being tested in an exploratory system under development at Rochester. Date: Tuesday, 1st March, 1988 Time: 3:30 pm to 4:30 pm Place: Bell 337, Amherst Campus Danish and Coffee will be served at 4:30 pm at Bell 224.