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Semi-situated learning of verbal and nonverbal content for repeated human-robot interaction

Iolanda Leite, André G. Pereira, Allison Funkhouser, Boyang Li, Jill Fain Lehman

Year
2016
Citations
19

Abstract

Content authoring of verbal and nonverbal behavior is a limiting factor when developing agents for repeated social interactions with the same user. We present PIP, an agent that crowdsources its own multimodal language behavior using a method we call semi-situated learning. PIP renders segments of its goal graph into brief stories that describe future situations, sends the stories to crowd workers who author and edit a single line of character dialog and its manner of expression, integrates the results into its goal state representation, and then uses the authored lines at similar moments in conversation. We present an initial case study in which the language needed to host a trivia game interaction is learned pre-deployment and tested in an autonomous system with 200 users "in the wild." The interaction data suggests that the method generates both meaningful content and variety of expression.

Keywords

SituatedNonverbal communicationComputer scienceDialog boxConversationHuman–computer interactionVariety (cybernetics)Representation (politics)Artificial intelligenceNatural language processing

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