This book is the result of a group of researchers from different
disciplines asking themselves one question: what does it take to
develop a computer interface that listens, talks, and can answer
questions in a domain? First, obviously, it takes specialized
modules for speech recognition and synthesis, human interaction
management (dialogue, input fusion, and multimodal output fusion),
basic question understanding, and answer finding. While all modules
are researched as independent subfields, this book describes the
development of state-of-the-art modules and their integration into
a single, working application capable of answering medical
(encyclopedic) questions such as "How long is a person with measles
contagious?" or "How can I prevent RSI?."
The contributions in this book, which grew out of the IMIX
project funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific
Research, document the development of this system, but also address
more general issues in natural language processing, such as the
development of multidimensional dialogue systems, the acquisition
of taxonomic knowledge from text, answer fusion, sequence
processing for domain-specific entity recognition, and syntactic
parsing for question answering. Together, they offer an overview of
the most important findings and lessons learned in the scope of the
IMIX project, making the book of interest to both academic and
commercial developers of human-machine interaction systems in Dutch
or any other language.
Highlights include: integrating multi-modal input fusion in
dialogue management (Van Schooten and Op den Akker),
state-of-the-art approaches to the extraction of term variants (Van
der Plas, Tiedemann, and Fahmi; Tjong Kim Sang, Hofmann, and De
Rijke), and multi-modal answer fusion (two chapters by Van
Hooijdonk, Bosma, Krahmer, Maes, Theune, and Marsi).
Watch the IMIX movie at www.nwo.nl/imix-film.
Like IBM's Watson, the IMIX system described in the book gives
naturally phrased responses to naturally posed questions. Where
Watson can only generate synthetic speech, the IMIX system also
recognizes speech. On the other hand, Watson is able to win a
television quiz, while the IMIX system is domain-specific,
answering only to medical questions.
"The Netherlands has always been one of the leaders in the
general field of Human Language Technology, and IMIX is no
exception. It was a very ambitious program, with a remarkably
successful performance leading to interesting results. The teams
covered a remarkable amount of territory in the general sphere of
multimodal question answering and information delivery, question
answering, information extraction and component technologies."
Eduard Hovy, USC, USA, Jon Oberlander, University of Edinburgh,
Scotland, and Norbert Reithinger, DFKI, Germany"
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