AICLHCOct 23, 2018

Stepwise Acquisition of Dialogue Act Through Human-Robot Interaction

arXiv:1810.09949v23 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses incremental improvements in human-robot communication for cognitive science and AI applications.

This study tackled the problem of enabling a robot to learn dialogue acts through human interaction, finding that with sufficient interaction time, participants often provided scaffolding and the robot could learn to estimate and respond to dialogue acts accurately in most cases.

A dialogue act (DA) represents the meaning of an utterance at the illocutionary force level (Austin 1962) such as a question, a request, and a greeting. Since DAs take charge of the most fundamental part of communication, we believe that the elucidation of DA learning mechanism is important for cognitive science and artificial intelligence. The purpose of this study is to verify that scaffolding takes place when a human teaches a robot, and to let a robot learn to estimate DAs and to make a response based on them step by step utilizing scaffolding provided by a human. To realize that, it is necessary for the robot to detect changes in utterance and rewards given by the partner and continue learning accordingly. Experimental results demonstrated that participants who continued interaction for a sufficiently long time often gave scaffolding for the robot. Although the number of experiments is still insufficient to obtain a definite conclusion, we observed that 1) the robot quickly learned to respond to DAs in most cases if the participants only spoke utterances that match the situation, 2) in the case of participants who builds scaffolding differently from what we assumed, learning did not proceed quickly, and 3) the robot could learn to estimate DAs almost exactly if the participants kept interaction for a sufficiently long time even if the scaffolding was unexpected.

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