13 resultados para Symbolic dialogue
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
We present an evaluation of a spoken language dialogue system with a module for the management of userrelated information, stored as user preferences and privileges. The flexibility of our dialogue management approach, based on Bayesian Networks (BN), together with a contextual information module, which performs different strategies for handling such information, allows us to include user information as a new level into the Context Manager hierarchy. We propose a set of objective and subjective metrics to measure the relevance of the different contextual information sources. The analysis of our evaluation scenarios shows that the relevance of the short-term information (i.e. the system status) remains pretty stable throughout the dialogue, whereas the dialogue history and the user profile (i.e. the middle-term and the long-term information, respectively) play a complementary role, evolving their usefulness as the dialogue evolves.
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An abstract is not available.
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We present two approaches to cluster dialogue-based information obtained by the speech understanding module and the dialogue manager of a spoken dialogue system. The purpose is to estimate a language model related to each cluster, and use them to dynamically modify the model of the speech recognizer at each dialogue turn. In the first approach we build the cluster tree using local decisions based on a Maximum Normalized Mutual Information criterion. In the second one we take global decisions, based on the optimization of the global perplexity of the combination of the cluster-related LMs. Our experiments show a relative reduction of the word error rate of 15.17%, which helps to improve the performance of the understanding and the dialogue manager modules.
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Starting from the way the inter-cellular communication takes place by means of protein channels and also from the standard knowledge about neuron functioning, we propose a computing model called a tissue P system, which processes symbols in a multiset rewriting sense, in a net of cells similar to a neural net. Each cell has a finite state memory, processes multisets of symbol-impulses, and can send impulses (?excitations?) to the neighboring cells. Such cell nets are shown to be rather powerful: they can simulate a Turing machine even when using a small number of cells, each of them having a small number of states. Moreover, in the case when each cell works in the maximal manner and it can excite all the cells to which it can send impulses, then one can easily solve the Hamiltonian Path Problem in linear time. A new characterization of the Parikh images of ET0L languages are also obtained in this framework.
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We present two approaches to cluster dialogue-based information obtained by the speech understanding module and the dialogue manager of a spoken dialogue system. The purpose is to estimate a language model related to each cluster, and use them to dynamically modify the model of the speech recognizer at each dialogue turn. In the first approach we build the cluster tree using local decisions based on a Maximum Normalized Mutual Information criterion. In the second one we take global decisions, based on the optimization of the global perplexity of the combination of the cluster-related LMs. Our experiments show a relative reduction of the word error rate of 15.17%, which helps to improve the performance of the understanding and the dialogue manager modules.
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This work investigates to what degree speakers with different verbal intelligence may adapt to each other. The work is based on a corpus consisting of 100 descriptions of a short film (monologues), 56 discussions about the same topic (dialogues), and verbal intelligence scores of the test participants. Adaptation between two dialogue partners was measured using cross-referencing, proportion of "I", "You" and "We" words, between-subject correlation and similarity of texts. It was shown that lower verbal intelligence speakers repeated more nouns and adjectives from the other and used the same linguistic categories more often than higher verbal intelligence speakers. In dialogues between strangers, participants with higher verbal intelligence showed a greater level of adaptation.
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In this work we investigated whether there is a relationship between dominant behaviour of dialogue participants and their verbal intelligence. The analysis is based on a corpus containing 56 dialogues and verbal intelligence scores of the test persons. All the dialogues were divided into three groups: H-H is a group of dialogues between higher verbal intelligence participants, L-L is a group of dialogues between lower verbal intelligence participant and L-H is a group of all the other dialogues. The dominance scores of the dialogue partners from each group were analysed. The analysis showed that differences between dominance scores and verbal intelligence coefficients for L-L were positively correlated. Verbal intelligence scores of the test persons were compared to other features that may reflect dominant behaviour. The analysis showed that number of interruptions, long utterances, times grabbed the floor, influence diffusion model, number of agreements and several acoustic features may be related to verbal intelligence. These features were used for the automatic classification of the dialogue partners into two groups (lower and higher verbal intelligence participants); the achieved accuracy was 89.36%.
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We present an approach to adapt dynamically the language models (LMs) used by a speech recognizer that is part of a spoken dialogue system. We have developed a grammar generation strategy that automatically adapts the LMs using the semantic information that the user provides (represented as dialogue concepts), together with the information regarding the intentions of the speaker (inferred by the dialogue manager, and represented as dialogue goals). We carry out the adaptation as a linear interpolation between a background LM, and one or more of the LMs associated to the dialogue elements (concepts or goals) addressed by the user. The interpolation weights between those models are automatically estimated on each dialogue turn, using measures such as the posterior probabilities of concepts and goals, estimated as part of the inference procedure to determine the actions to be carried out. We propose two approaches to handle the LMs related to concepts and goals. Whereas in the first one we estimate a LM for each one of them, in the second one we apply several clustering strategies to group together those elements that share some common properties, and estimate a LM for each cluster. Our evaluation shows how the system can estimate a dynamic model adapted to each dialogue turn, which helps to improve the performance of the speech recognition (up to a 14.82% of relative improvement), which leads to an improvement in both the language understanding and the dialogue management tasks.
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Con motivo de la celebracio?n en 2008 del An?o Europeo del Dia?logo Intercultural, el Con- sejo de Europa promovio? una serie de encuentros y foros de debate en torno al papel de Europa en la gestio?n de la inmigracio?n, desde sus mu?ltiples dimensiones. Entre ellas, se encuentra el a?mbito deportivo, por su papel socializador como elemento cultural de dia?logo e identidad, aun- que tambie?n como espacio de confrontacio?n y discriminacio?n, que concierne tanto a participantes como espectadores, desde una perspectiva global y local. Con el objetivo de contrastar experien- cias y reflexiones a este respecto, tuvo lugar la primera conferencia europea con el nombre ?De- porte y Diversidad?, celebrada en Estrasburgo y organizada por la Agencia para la Educacio?n a trave?s del Deporte, el Consejo de Europa - a trave?s del EPAS - y la Universidad de Estrasburgo.
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Un luogo simbolico. Casa del infinito
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La tesis abre su mirada hacia uno de los discursos más interesantes, a mi juicio, de la cultura arquitectónica contemporánea: el de la relación establecida entre el ser humano y la naturaleza. Algunos autores creen que esta relación se establece como simbiosis, como un organismo arquitectónico en correlación y analogía con su entorno y emplazamiento. Otros ven una correspodencia en la que la arquitectura se ubica como un artefacto que ”dialoga” y que no imita a la naturaleza. Las arquitecturas en árboles se desarrollan en estos dos sentidos. El panorama de estas arquitecturas está abierto, es incipiente, laberíntico, poliédrico y caleidoscópico. Metodológicamente ha sido necesario acotarlo y el período de estudio elegido ha sido el más fructífero de la historia y cultura de las estructuras en los árboles. En los últimos veinticinco años, éstas han vuelto a generar atracción por el auge de la sensibilización medioambiental. También se ha producido un incremento de las culturas del ocio (con acento en el deseo por encima de la utilidad o la necesidad) y de la introspección (en busca de un retiro espiritual alejado de la cultura de la globalización). Hacia 1990 se producen acontecimientos relevantes que son los precursores de este desarrollo: la aparición en 1988 del libro “Treehouses” de Aikman abre de manera desenfadada esta cultura arquitectónica. Para acotar el final del período de investigación se ha dejado un margen desde 2010 a 2015 por prudencia investigadora. Los objetivos de la tesis se han centrado: Primero, en encuadrar el concepto de “arquitecturas en árboles”; Segundo, en descubrir los motivos, ideas que inspiraron las arquitecturas en árboles anteriores al período de estudio y su posible repercusión en sus descendientes contemporáneas. Principalmente son atenciones ideológicas, culturales, sociales, filosóficas, simbólicas, míticos y funcionales. Tercero, en confeccionar una taxonomía de las intenciones, consideraciones y desencadenantes básicos que pudieran establecerse como claves del proceso imaginario, conceptivo y constructivo de la actuales arquitecturas en árboles (1990-2010). Para ello nos hemos puesto bajo el paraguas metodológico del concepto de atención, defendido por Quaroni, Ferrater, Broadbent y Seguí. Hemos planteado una reflexión sobre el tipo de atenciones y su idoneaidad llegando a distinguir las siguientes atenciones básicas: 1) Las atenciones históricas (del pasado): englobando bajo esta denominación el entramado rizomático de atenciones sociales, culturales, antropológicas, filosóficas, míticas y simbólicas. Estas atenciones permiten al lector posicionarse de manera efectiva en este amplio campo, para entrar con posterioridad en el cuerpo de la investigación. Posteriormente descubriremos que éstas se convierten en atenciones crítico-modales para las arquitecturas contemporáneas. 2) Las atenciones funcionales contemporáneas: en las que estableceremos una conexión multiple con otras atenciones ergonómicas, organizativas, tipológicas y medioambientales básicas que están claramente influenciadas por aquellas. Quedan establecidas en una taxonomía inédita de treinta ocho subcategorías que nos alejan del estereotipo de la casa en el árbol como lugar de defensa y protección, o como espacio lúdico-infantil 3) Las atenciones constructivas contemporáneas: que las relacionaremos con las biológicas, estructurales-portantes, tipológico-constructivas, medioambientales básicas (de los materiales), y que son tenidas en cuenta por los contructores. Asimismo, se revelan los sistemas de construcción de arquitecturas portantes y autoportantes (artificiales-naturales) y las 100% naturales. Además, se decubren los seis mecanismos estructurales de sujeción de habitáculos en árboles más utilizados, así como cuáles son los árboles idóneos para soportar estas estructuras. 4) Las atenciones formales contemporáneas: con sus conexiones hacia las atenciones presenciales, espaciales organizativas y medioambientales básicas. Se establecen taxonomías sistemáticas formales simples y complejas (pragmática, icónica, analógica y canónica). Se estudian con profundidad la analogía con otras realidades y la estructuración geométrica formal (canónica) por considerarlas las más relevantes. Se culmina la investigación con una reflexión sobre el conjunto rizomático de atenciones, disciplinas, nociones y conceptos inherentes al campo de las arquitecturas en árboles, ejemplificándolo con un ideograma. La última vista se fija sobre el arco temporal de estas arquitecturas reflejando las cincuenta más significativas por su mayor coherencia de competencia atencional, total o parcial. ABSTRACT This dissertation looks into one the most interesting discourses in contemporary architectural culture: the relationship between human beings and nature. Some scholars think of this relationship as a symbiosis, as an architectural organism armonically correlated with its environment and location. Others believe that a correspondence exists where architecture stands as an artifact ‘in dialogue’ with, and not as an imitation of, nature. Treehouses develop in both senses. The realm of these architectures is open, embryonic, labyrinthine, polyhedral and kaleidoscopic. It was necessary to methodologically delimit it. We chose for the study the most fruitful period in the history and culture of treehouses. During the last twenty-five years, the latter have exerted great appeal once more due to the rise in environmental awareness. Likewise, leisure cultures (highlighting desire over utility or necessity) and introspection (seeking spiritual retreat far from the culture of globalization) have significantly increased. Around 1990, some relevant events announce this development: the publication of the book Treehouses by Aikman in 1988 inaugurates in an informal fashion such architectural culture. As for the final limit of the period addressed, an open margin between 2010 and 2015 has been established, out of scholarly prudence. The dissertation objectives have focused on: First, framing the concept of “treehouses”. Second, discovering the motifs and ideas that inspired treehouses in previous periods, and their possible influence on their contemporary successors. These consist basically of idelogical, cultural, social, philosophical, symbolic, mythical and functional attentions. Third, elaborate a taxonomy of the different basic intentions, considerations and triggers that might appear as crucial for the imaginary, conceptual and constructive process of current treehouses (1990-2010). To this end, we stood under the methodological umbrella of the notion of attention as defined by Quaroni, Ferrater, Broadbent and Seguí. We have proposed a reflection on the different kind of attentions and their suitability, distinguishing the following basic attentions: 1) Historical attentions (from the past): this denomination comprises the rhizomatic fabric of social, cultural, anthropological, philosophical, mythical and symbolic attentions. These attentions allow the reader to get a foothold on this broad field before being able to go into the main body of research. We will later discover that these become critical modal attentions for contemporary architectures. 2) Contemporary functional attentions. A multiple connection will be established with other basic ergonomic, organisational, typological and environmental attentions clearly influenced by them. They are classified in an unprecedented taxonomy of thirty-eight subcategories that move us away from the stereotype of the tree house as a site of defense and protection, or as a children’s playground. 3) Contemporary constructive attentions. They will be linked with basic biological, structural-carrying, typological-constructive, environmental attentions (of materials) taken into account by constructors. Likewise, the construction systems for carrying and self-carrying (artificial-natural) architectures, as well as for 100% natural ones, are revealed. Besides, we disclose the six structural mechanisms employed to fasten cabins to trees, and which the most suitable trees to support such structures are. 4) Contemporary formal attentions, including their connections with spatial, organizational and basic environmental attentions. Simple and complex formal systematic taxonomies (pragmatic, iconic, analogical and canonical) have been established. Their analogy to other realities and to formal geometrical (canonical) structuring is studied in depth as utterly significant. The research concludes by reflecting on the rhizomatic set of attentions, disciplines, notions and concepts inherent in the field of treehouses through an ideogram. The final view engages with the time span of these architectures by highlighting the fifty most noteworthy on account of the higher consistency of their attentional competence, either total or partial.
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El presente trabajo recoge los resultados de una investigación sobre la «vivienda productiva», es decir, de la casa como lugar de trabajo. Dicha investigación se ha ocupado de explorar cómo influyen las cotidianeidades doméstico-laborales actuales —junto con sus arquitecturas y los urbanismos que estas generan— en la sociedad, en especial en temas sociales centrales como la construcción de las subjetividades, y de una vida en comunidad. Asimismo, explora cómo podrían influir en un futuro. La hipótesis sobre la que se trabaja, y que finalmente se intenta demostrar, consiste en que, en la territorialidad múltiple de lo laboral, la vivienda, como plataforma doméstica multiusos, productiva y reproductiva de la que muchas personas disponen, desempeña un papel nodal, y es posible que en el futuro su papel sea aún más importante y más visible. La vivienda productiva funciona como una infraestructura urbana desde la cual se construyen diferentes tipos de bienes materiales e inmateriales, pero sobre todo formas de relación, sociales y productivas con otros, además de imaginarios y afectos. La vivienda como infraestructura productiva y reproductiva es tanto «fábrica fundamental de lo social», como nos enseña Silvia Federici, como «fábrica de lo urbano». El trabajo en casa, como parte de diferentes dinámicas «dispersas» del trabajo que se dan en la actualidad, presenta tanto problemáticas y desafíos importantes, como capitales y posibilidades sociales. Por un lado, puede facilitar una absorción de tipo «24/7» vinculada a las lógicas de producción dispersa y consumo dominantes además de la que se da por las dinámicas patriarcales tradicionales, y en múltiples casos situaciones de evidente asimetría y de explotación laboral. También puede propiciar situaciones socialmente extendidas o impuestas de soledad y aislamiento. Sin embargo, está asimismo vinculado al surgimiento de espacios de experimentación tanto en soledad como en compañía, de cooperación y de intercambio, además de a la evidente posibilidad de construir rutinas propias y, por tanto, una subjetividad laboral propia. Por otro lado, frente a la idea general y homogénea del trabajador casero como un sujeto mayoritariamente aislado de su entorno, las jornadas de trabajo de los trabajadores caseros estudiados presentan una gran diversidad. Estas pueden conllevar aislamiento y exclusión, así como acompañar diferentes formas de construcción de una ciudadanía activa, tanto en solitario, como mediante formas de participación activa en la construcción de una vida en comunidad. En esta investigación se analizan, pues, desafíos y oportunidades de estas espacialidades del trabajo y, a través de este análisis, se indaga en el papel de los marcos físicos, organizativos y simbólicos actuales para la vivienda y para la ciudad pensada desde los trabajadores caseros. Al mismo tiempo se exploran nuevos tipos de vivienda y urbanismos que puedan quizás acompañar procesos sociales de inclusión, así como de emancipación, cooperación e intercambio y, en general, nuevas formas de vecindad y bienestar compartido en los ámbitos doméstico-productivos. Metodológicamente, las singularidades presentes en las realidades estudiadas invitan además a explorar protocolos de análisis, métodos de diseño, de gestión y gobierno que, desde lo micro, puedan dialogar con lo cotidiano y sus singularidades. Diego Barajas, autor de la tesis, es arquitecto dedicado a la práctica, a la investigación y la docencia. Su trabajo se focaliza en explorar el carácter mediador de la arquitectura frente a lo cotidiano y sus microrrealidades. Es profesor de proyectos de urbanismo en la IE School of Architecture y es miembro de Husos, una plataforma de investigación y diseño orientada a la innovación en arquitectura y urbanismo, con sede en Madrid. Es el autor del libro Dispersion, A Study of Global Mobility and the Dynamics of a Fictional Urbanism (Episode Publishers, Róterdam, 2003). Sus trabajos teóricos y de investigación han aparecido en libros y revistas internacionales tales como The Domestic and The Foreign in Architecture (010 Publishers, 2008), Public Spheres, a Europan Discussion (Europan9, 2007), Photoespaña 05 (La Fábrica, Madrid, 2005), Domus, Volume, Abitare, Architese, Plot, y Summa+. Su trabajo se ha expuesto en la Bienal de Venecia (selección principal), la Bienal de Róterdam, la Fundación Tapies, Photoespaña, entre otros y es parte de la colección permanente del FRAC Centre en Orleans y del Historisch Museum de Róterdam entre otros. Antes de estudiar en Róterdam, se gradúa con Honores en la Universidad de los Andes en 1999 y su tesis de grado de arquitectura recibe la máxima distinción como proyecto de Grado Meritorio. ABSTRACT The present study records an investigation into the «productive house», or the home as a workplace. This investigation looks at how working from home, its architectures, and the urban dynamics generated around it influence daily life and the construction of society. It also explores what influences home-based work might have in the future, particularly in central themes such as the biopolitical construction of subjectivities and community life. The central hypothesis revolves around the idea that the home, as a multi-use infrastructure that most of us have access to, plays a fundamental role in the contemporary work sphere, due to —or even in spite of— the omnipresence of work in practically every moment and area of our daily lives, and might play a main role in the future. The home functions as a kind of hub from which we create different kinds of material and immaterial goods, but above all relationships with others, both social and productive, as well as imaginaries and affections. The home, as a machine for production and reproduction, is as much a main «factory of the social» as Silvia Federici describes it, as a «factory of the urban». Working from home, as one of several «dispersed» work dynamics that are part of the contemporary world of work, presents as many important problematics and challenges as it does possibilities and social capital. On the one hand, it can contribute to kind of «24/7» absorption linked both to the logistics of the current dispersed production and consumption, and to that of traditional patriarchal dynamics, and in some cases even clearly asymmetrical situations that exploit the workforce. It can also lead to the socially widespread phenomena of isolation and loneliness, at times imposed upon home-based workers. However, by the same token, it is also linked to the growth of experimental spaces of cooperation and exchange, both solitary and in company, as well as the clear possibility of constructing individualised routines and, therefore, a personal laboural subjectivity. On the other hand, contrary to the generalised, homogenous idea of a home-based worker who is mostly isolated from his or her environment, the working days of those we studied went hand in hand with different ways of building subjectivities. This could be as much in exclusion and isolation as through building an active citizenship, at times in solitary and at times actively participating in the construction of communal life. In this investigation, therefore, the challenges and opportunities of the home as workplace have been analysed, and through this analysis we have inquired into the role of current physical, organisational and symbolic frameworks for the home and for the city from the perspective of home workers. At the same time we have explored new types of homes and of town planning that could perhaps accompany social processes of diversity and inclusion as well as emancipation, cooperation and exchange and, in general, new forms of shared welfare in productive domestic environments. Methodologically, the singularities present in the cases studied also invite us to explore protocols of analysis, methods of design, management and government that, from the micro level, could dialogue with the peculiarities of day-to-day life. The author of this thesis, Diego Barajas, is an architect dedicated to practice, investigation and teaching. His work is focussed on exploring the mediating nature of architecture and the built environment in terms of daily life and its microrealities. He is professor of urban projects at the IE School of Architecture and member of Husos, a platform for investigation and town planning based in Madrid. He is the author of the book Dispersion, A Study of Global Mobility and the Dynamics of a Fictional Urbanism (Episode Publishers, Rotterdam, 2003) and his theoretical works and investigations have appeared in books such as The Domestic and The Foreign in Architecture (010 Publishers, 2008), Public Spheres, a Europan Discussion (Europan9, 2007), Photoespaña 05 (La Fábrica, Madrid, 2005), and in international magazines such as Domus, Volume, Abitare, Architese, Plot and Summa+. His work has been exhibited in places such as the Venice Biennial (main selection), the Rotterdam Biennial, the Tapies Foundation and Photoespaña, among others, and forms part of the permanent collection of the FRAC Centre in Orleans and the Historisch Museum of Rotterdam. Before studying in Rotterdam, he graduated with Honours from the University of the Andes in 1999, and his architecture degree thesis received the maximum distinction of Meritorious Graduation Project.
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As sustainability reporting (SR) practices have being increasingly adopted by corporations over the last twenty years, most of the existing literature on SR has stressed the role of external determinants (such as institutional and stakeholder pressures) in explaining this uptake. However, given that recent evidence points to a broader range of motives and uses (both external and internal) of SR, we contend that its role within company-level activities deserves greater academic attention. In order to address this research gap, this paper seeks to provide a more integrated perspective of both institutional and efficiency explanations of SR dynamics, as well as to highlight the role of company-level characteristics in explaining its contribution to sustainability management practices. More specifically, we suggest that substantive SR implementation can be predicted by assessing the level of fit between the organization and the SR framework being adopted. Building on this idea, our theoretical model defines three forms of fit (technical, cultural and political) and identifies organizational characteristics associated to each of these fits. Finally, implications for academic research, businesses and policy-makers are derived.