Implicit proposal filtering in multi-party consensus-building conversations

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Abstract

An attempt was made to statistically estimate proposals which survived the discussion to be incorporated in the final agreement in an instance of a Japanese design conversation. Low level speech and vision features of hearer behaviors corresponding to aiduti, noddings and gaze were found to be a positive predictor of survival. The result suggests that non-linguistic hearer responses work as implicit proposal filters in consensus building, and could provide promising candidate features for the purpose of recognition and summarization of meeting events.

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APA

Katagiri, Y., Matsusaka, Y., Den, Y., Enomoto, M., Ishizaki, M., & Takanashi, K. (2008). Implicit proposal filtering in multi-party consensus-building conversations. In Proceedings of the 9th SIGdial Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue, SIGDIAL 2008 (pp. 100–103). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.3115/1622064.1622084

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