other,27-1-P03-1070,bq |
of
<term>
signals
</term>
to establish
<term>
|
common ground
|
</term>
in
<term>
human-computer interaction
|
#5034
We investigate the verbal and nonverbal means for grounding, and propose a design for embodied conversational agents that relies on both kinds of signals to establish common ground in human-computer interaction. |
tech,30-1-P03-1070,bq |
establish
<term>
common ground
</term>
in
<term>
|
human-computer interaction
|
</term>
. We analyzed
<term>
eye gaze
</term>
|
#5037
We investigate the verbal and nonverbal means for grounding, and propose a design for embodied conversational agents that relies on both kinds of signals to establish common ground in human-computer interaction . |
other,8-2-P03-1070,bq |
</term>
,
<term>
head nods
</term>
and
<term>
|
attentional focus
|
</term>
in the context of a
<term>
direction-giving
|
#5048
We analyzed eye gaze, head nods and attentional focus in the context of a direction-giving task. |
other,15-2-P03-1070,bq |
attentional focus
</term>
in the context of a
<term>
|
direction-giving task
|
</term>
. The distribution of
<term>
nonverbal
|
#5055
We analyzed eye gaze, head nods and attentional focus in the context of a direction-giving task . |
other,26-3-P03-1070,bq |
reflected a monitoring of lack of
<term>
|
negative feedback
|
</term>
. Based on these results , we present
|
#5084
The distribution of nonverbal behaviors differed depending on the type of dialogue move being grounded, and the overall pattern reflected a monitoring of lack of negative feedback . |