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.
CITATION STYLE
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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