• DocumentCode
    2279966
  • Title

    Evaluating dialogue strategies and user behavior

  • Author

    Danieli, Morena

  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2001
  • Firstpage
    234
  • Abstract
    Summary form only given. The need for accurate and flexible evaluation frameworks for spoken and multimodal dialogue systems has become crucial. In the early design phases of spoken dialogue systems, it is worthwhile evaluating the user´s easiness in interacting with different dialogue strategies, rather than the efficiency of the dialogue system in providing the required information. The success of a task-oriented dialogue system greatly depends on the ability of providing a meaningful match between user´s expectations and system capabilities, and a good trade-off improves the user´s effectiveness. The evaluation methodology requires three steps. The first step has the goal of individuating the different tokens and relations that constitute the user mental model of the task. Once tokens and relations are considered for designing one or more dialogue strategies, the evaluation enters its second step which is constituted by a between-group experiment. Each strategy is tried by a representative set of experimental subjects. The third step includes measuring user effectiveness in providing the spoken dialogue system with the information it needs to solve the task. The paper argues that the application of the three-steps evaluation method may increase our understanding of the user mental model of a task during early stages of development of a spoken language agent. Experimental data supporting this claim are reported.
  • Keywords
    design engineering; human factors; interactive systems; natural language interfaces; speech recognition; speech-based user interfaces; task analysis; dialogue strategies; human factor studies; mental model; multimodal dialogue systems; speech recognition; spoken dialogue systems; spoken language agent; system capabilities; task success measures; Best practices; Cognitive science; Costs; Delay; Human factors; Natural languages; Speech recognition; Time measurement; Usability;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding, 2001. ASRU '01. IEEE Workshop on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-7343-X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ASRU.2001.1034630
  • Filename
    1034630