This paper identifies stylistic differences in instruction-giving observed in a corpus of human-robot dialogue. Differences in verbosity and structure (i.e., single-intent vs. multi-intent instructions) arose naturally without restrictions or prior guidance on how users should speak with the robot. Different styles were found to produce different rates of miscommunication, and correlations were found between style differences and individual user variation, trust, and interaction experience with the robot. Understanding potential consequences and factors that influence style can inform design of dialogue systems that are robust to natural variation from human users.
CITATION STYLE
Lukin, S. M., Pollard, K. A., Bonial, C., Marge, M., Henry, C., Artstein, R., … Voss, C. R. (2018). Consequences and factors of stylistic differences in human-robot dialogue. In SIGDIAL 2018 - 19th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue - Proceedings of the Conference (pp. 110–118). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/w18-5012
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