Toward the development of an integrative framework for multimodal dialogue processing

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Abstract

The “universal accessibility” concept is acquiring an important role in the research area of human-computer interaction (HCI). This phenomenon is guided by the need to simplify the access to technological devices, such as mobile phones, PDAs and portable PCs, by making human-computer interaction more similar to human-human communication. In this direction, multimodal interaction has emerged as a new paradigm of human-computer interaction, which advances the implementation of universal accessibility. The main challenge of multimodal interaction, that is also the main topic of this paper, lies in developing a framework that is able to acquire information derived from whatever input modalities, to give these inputs an appropriate representation with a common meaning, to integrate these individual representations into a joint semantic interpretation, and to understand which is the better way to react to the interpreted multimodal sentence by activating the appropriate output devices. A detailed description of this framework and its functionalities will be given in this paper, along with some preliminary application details.

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APA

D’Ulizia, A., Ferri, F., & Grifoni, P. (2008). Toward the development of an integrative framework for multimodal dialogue processing. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 5333, pp. 509–518). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-88875-8_74

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