The Philips automatic train timetable information system
Speech Communication - Special issue on interactive voice technology for telecommunication applications
Dialogue act modeling for automatic tagging and recognition of conversational speech
Computational Linguistics
Statistical framework for a Spanish spoken dialogue corpus
Speech Communication
Inference of finite-state transducers from regular languages
Pattern Recognition
Automatic annotation of dialogues using n-grams
TSD'06 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Text, Speech and Dialogue
Estimating the number of segments for improving dialogue act labelling
Natural Language Engineering
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A dialogue system is usually defined as a computer system that interacts with a human user to achieve a task using dialogue [5]. In these systems, the computer must know the meaning and intention of the user input, in order to give the appropriate answer. The user turns must be interpreted by the system, taking only into account the essential information, i.e, their semantics for the dialogue process and the task to be accomplished. This information is usually represented by labels called Dialogue Acts (DA) [2] which label different segments of the turn known as utterances [8]. The DA labels usually take into account the semantics of the utterance with respect to the dialogue process, but they can include semantic information related to the task the dialogue is about.