The Structure of Multimodal Dialogue II (Electronic book text)


Most dialogues are multimodal. When people talk, they use not only their voices, but also facial expressions and other gestures, and perhaps even touch. When computers communicate with people, they use pictures and perhaps sounds, together with textual language, and when people communicate with computers, they are likely to use mouse "gestures" almost as much as words. How are such multimodal dialogues constructed? This is the main question addressed in this selection of papers of the second "Venaco Workshop", sponsored by the NATO Research Study Group RSG-10 on Automatic Speech Processing, and by the European Speech Communication Association (ESCA).

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Product Description

Most dialogues are multimodal. When people talk, they use not only their voices, but also facial expressions and other gestures, and perhaps even touch. When computers communicate with people, they use pictures and perhaps sounds, together with textual language, and when people communicate with computers, they are likely to use mouse "gestures" almost as much as words. How are such multimodal dialogues constructed? This is the main question addressed in this selection of papers of the second "Venaco Workshop", sponsored by the NATO Research Study Group RSG-10 on Automatic Speech Processing, and by the European Speech Communication Association (ESCA).

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Product Details

General

Imprint

John Benjamins Publishing Co

Country of origin

Netherlands

Release date

March 2000

Availability

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First published

2000

Editors

, ,

Format

Electronic book text

Pages

522

ISBN-13

978-90-272-7387-1

Barcode

9789027273871

Categories

LSN

90-272-7387-1



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