Classification and Resolution of Non-Sentential Utterances in Dialogue

This article addresses the problems of classification and resolution of non-sentential utterances (NSUs) in dialogue. NSUs are utterances that do not have a complete sentential form but convey a full clausal meaning given the conversational context, such as “To the contrary!” or “How much?”. The pre...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paolo Dragone, Pierre Lison
Format: article
Language:EN
Published: Accademia University Press 2016
Subjects:
H
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/e68d84582ad14b1bbcf84c1fb908c35f
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Summary:This article addresses the problems of classification and resolution of non-sentential utterances (NSUs) in dialogue. NSUs are utterances that do not have a complete sentential form but convey a full clausal meaning given the conversational context, such as “To the contrary!” or “How much?”. The presented approach builds upon the work of Fernández, Ginzburg, and Lappin (2007), who provide a taxonomy of NSUs divided in 15 classes along with a small annotated corpus extracted from dialogue transcripts. The main part of this article focuses on the automatic classification of NSUs according to these classes. We show that a combination of novel linguistic features and active learning techniques yields a significant improvement in the classification accuracy over the state-of-the-art, and is able to mitigate the scarcity of labelled data. Based on this classifier, the article also presents a novel approach for the semantic resolution of NSUs in context using probabilistic rules.