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Discourse Structure Grosz and Sidner
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Why bother? Leads to an account of discourse meaning Constrains how utterances are related Useful for explaining interruptions and the purpose of discourse participants
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Linguistic Structure of the sequence of the utterances Discourse segments Utterances within a segment contribute to a common purpose Drawback: hard to figure out segmentation Clues: pause lengths, cue words, use of referring expressions
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Intentional Discourse Purpose – reason why discourse happens in the first place Discourse Segment Purpose – how a segment contributes to the DP Relations –Dominance (DSP1 dominates DSP2) –Satisfaction Precedence (DSP1 sat-pre’s DSP2)
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Attentional Different: property fo Discourse not participants “abstraction of the participants’ focus of attention as their discourse unfolds” Dynamic stack that records salient objects, properties and relations Focusing – process of manipulating focus spaces on attentional (focus) stack
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Attentional DS’s tied to focus spaces. Pushed and popped off stack depending on dominance hierarchy Focus stack: only what is relevant at that time, Intentional – complete record At end of discourse, focus stack is empty Only attentional state constrains referring expressions
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Processing Issues How does OCP judge segmentation? Intention recognition: –Cue phrases –Utterance level intentions –Shared knowledge about actions and objects in domain
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Processing Issues Recognition complete at end of segment But OCP must be able to recognize a generalization of DSP Focus Stack: –Constrain range of DSP’s for relating to current DSP –Constrain search for possible referents (centering)
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Interruptions True Interruptions Weak Interruptions/Flashbacks Digressions
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