#15988We claim that the advantage of this approach is its reliance uponpragmatic information, including discourse content and conversational goals, rather than upon precise representations of the preceding utterance alone.
other,9-2-P85-1024,ak
pragmatics-based framework for interpreting such
<term>
utterances
</term>
, including identification of the
#15960This paper presents a pragmatics-based framework for interpreting suchutterances, including identification of the speaker' s discourse goal in employing the fragment.
other,19-3-P85-1024,ak
including
<term>
discourse content
</term>
and
<term>
conversational goals
</term>
, rather than upon precise
<term>
representations
#15995We claim that the advantage of this approach is its reliance upon pragmatic information, including discourse content andconversational goals, rather than upon precise representations of the preceding utterance alone.
#15974This paper presents a pragmatics-based framework for interpreting such utterances, including identification of the speaker' s discourse goal in employing thefragment.
other,30-3-P85-1024,ak
representations
</term>
of the preceding
<term>
utterance
</term>
alone .
<term>
Determiners
</term>
play
#16006We claim that the advantage of this approach is its reliance upon pragmatic information, including discourse content and conversational goals, rather than upon precise representations of the precedingutterance alone.
other,16-3-P85-1024,ak
pragmatic information
</term>
, including
<term>
discourse content
</term>
and
<term>
conversational goals
</term>
#15992We claim that the advantage of this approach is its reliance upon pragmatic information, includingdiscourse content and conversational goals, rather than upon precise representations of the preceding utterance alone.
other,15-2-P85-1024,ak
</term>
, including identification of the
<term>
speaker ' s
</term><term>
discourse goal
</term>
in employing
#15966This paper presents a pragmatics-based framework for interpreting such utterances, including identification of thespeaker ' s discourse goal in employing the fragment.
other,18-2-P85-1024,ak
identification of the
<term>
speaker ' s
</term><term>
discourse goal
</term>
in employing the
<term>
fragment
</term>
#15969This paper presents a pragmatics-based framework for interpreting such utterances, including identification of the speaker' sdiscourse goal in employing the fragment.
other,0-1-P85-1024,ak
interrogatives
</term>
in a general manner .
<term>
Intersentential elliptical utterances
</term>
occur frequently in
<term>
information-seeking
#15942This paper outlines Plume as it currently exists and describes our detailed design for extending Plume to handle passives, relative clauses, and interrogatives in a general manner.Intersentential elliptical utterances occur frequently in information-seeking dialogues.
other,26-3-P85-1024,ak
goals
</term>
, rather than upon precise
<term>
representations
</term>
of the preceding
<term>
utterance
</term>
#16002We claim that the advantage of this approach is its reliance upon pragmatic information, including discourse content and conversational goals, rather than upon preciserepresentations of the preceding utterance alone.