A formal theory of plan recognition
A formal theory of plan recognition
POPL '87 Proceedings of the 14th ACM SIGACT-SIGPLAN symposium on Principles of programming languages
A model of plan inference that distinguishes between the beliefs of actors and observers
ACL '86 Proceedings of the 24th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Logical form of complex sentences in task-oriented dialogues
ACL '91 Proceedings of the 29th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Collaborating with Focused and Unfocused Users under Imperfect Communication
UM '01 Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on User Modeling 2001
Augmenting and Executing SharedPlans for Multimodal Communication
CMC '98 Revised Papers from the Second International Conference on Cooperative Multimodal Communication
A collaborative planning model of intentional structure
Computational Linguistics
A process model for recognizing communicative acts and modeling negotiation subdialogues
Computational Linguistics
Action relations in rationale clauses and means clauses
COLING '92 Proceedings of the 14th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Collaborative plans for group activities
IJCAI'93 Proceedings of the 13th international joint conference on Artifical intelligence - Volume 1
Speech-graphics dialogue systems
ISDS '97 Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems on Bringing Speech and NLP Together in Real Applications
Generating information-sharing subdialogues in expert-user consultation
IJCAI'95 Proceedings of the 14th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
Actions, beliefs and intentions in rationale clauses and means clauses
AAAI'92 Proceedings of the tenth national conference on Artificial intelligence
Teaching and leading an ad hoc teammate: Collaboration without pre-coordination
Artificial Intelligence
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A model of plan recognition in discourse must be based on intended recognition, distinguish each agent's beliefs and intentions from the other's, and avoid assumptions about the correctness or completeness of the agents' beliefs. In this paper, we present an algorithm for plan recognition that is based on the Shared-Plan model of collaboration (Grosz and Sidner, 1990; Lochbaum et al., 1990) and that satisfies these constraints.