Knowledge and common knowledge in a distributed environment
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
A game-theoretic account of implicature
TARK '92 Proceedings of the fourth conference on Theoretical aspects of reasoning about knowledge
Artificial Intelligence - Special volume on natural language processing
Centering: a framework for modeling the local coherence of discourse
Computational Linguistics
Japanese discourse and the process of centering
Computational Linguistics
A plan-based analysis of indirect speech acts
Computational Linguistics
A property-sharing constraint in Centering
ACL '86 Proceedings of the 24th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
ACM Transactions on Speech and Language Processing (TSLP)
JSAI'07 Proceedings of the 2007 conference on New frontiers in artificial intelligence
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As interaction between autonomous agents, communication can be analyzed in game-theoretic terms. Meaning game is proposed to formalize the core of intended communication in which the sender sends a message and the receiver attempts to infer its meaning intended by the sender. Basic issues involved in the game of natural language communication are discussed, such as salience, grammaticality, common sense, and common belief, together with some demonstration of the feasibility of game-theoretic account of language.