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Editors Amy Neustein and Judith A. Markowitz have recruited a
talented group of contributors to introduce the next generation of
natural language technologies to resolve some of the most vexing
natural-language problems that compromise the performance of speech
systems today. This fourteen-chapter anthology consists of
contributions from industry scientists and from academicians
working at major universities in North America and Europe. They
include researchers who have played a central role in DARPA-funded
programs and developers who craft real-world solutions for
corporations. This anthology is aimed at speech engineers, system
developers, computer scientists, AI researchers, and others
interested in utilizing natural-language technology in both spoken
and text-based applications.
"Mobile Speech and Advanced Natural Language Solutions" presents
the discussion of the most recent advances in intelligent
human-computer interaction, including fascinating new study
findings on talk-in-interaction, which is the province of
conversation analysis, a subfield in sociology/sociolinguistics, a
new and emerging area in natural language understanding. Editors
Amy Neustein and Judith A. Markowitz have recruited a talented
group of contributors to introduce the next generation natural
language technologies for practical speech processing applications
that serve the consumer's need for well-functioning natural
language-driven personal assistants and other mobile devices, while
also addressing business' need for better functioning IVR-driven
call centers that yield a more satisfying experience for the
caller. This anthology is aimed at two distinct audiences: one
consisting of speech engineers and system developers; the other
comprised of linguists and cognitive scientists. The text builds on
the experience and knowledge of each of these audiences by exposing
them to the work of the other.
Editors Amy Neustein and Judith A. Markowitz have recruited a
talented group of contributors to introduce the next generation of
natural language technologies to resolve some of the most vexing
natural-language problems that compromise the performance of speech
systems today. This fourteen-chapter anthology consists of
contributions from industry scientists and from academicians
working at major universities in North America and Europe. They
include researchers who have played a central role in DARPA-funded
programs and developers who craft real-world solutions for
corporations. This anthology is aimed at speech engineers, system
developers, computer scientists, AI researchers, and others
interested in utilizing natural-language technology in both spoken
and text-based applications.
"Mobile Speech and Advanced Natural Language Solutions" presents
the discussion of the most recent advances in intelligent
human-computer interaction, including fascinating new study
findings on talk-in-interaction, which is the province of
conversation analysis, a subfield in sociology/sociolinguistics, a
new and emerging area in natural language understanding. Editors
Amy Neustein and Judith A. Markowitz have recruited a talented
group of contributors to introduce the next generation natural
language technologies for practical speech processing applications
that serve the consumer's need for well-functioning natural
language-driven personal assistants and other mobile devices, while
also addressing business' need for better functioning IVR-driven
call centers that yield a more satisfying experience for the
caller. This anthology is aimed at two distinct audiences: one
consisting of speech engineers and system developers; the other
comprised of linguists and cognitive scientists. The text builds on
the experience and knowledge of each of these audiences by exposing
them to the work of the other.
Gertrude Stein called it ""the only really modern novel form that
has come into existence,"" yet the mystery genre was a century old
before it featured its first gay main character. Since then,
""lavender"" detective fiction has been one of the fastest growing
segments of the genre, incorporating gay and lesbian cultural
elements and offering crossover appeal, yet it is still
marginalized and largely unknown to mainstream readers. Its authors
call upon a century's development in the mystery genre, while also
providing new, more accurate images of lesbians and gay men than
generally found in mainstream literature and popular media. This
survey of gay and lesbian detective fiction examines series and
groundbreaking stand-alone novels published since 1964, analyzing
main characters, themes, plot elements and more. Author interviews
provide insights that are incorporated into the analyses. The work
begins with an overview of gay and lesbian detective fiction, and
an outline of the mystery genre's development. Subsequent chapters,
arranged by the main character's profession (police, private
investigator, amateur sleuth, etc.) , examine the series or work in
the contexts of mainstream mystery fiction and gay and lesbian
culture. Author biographies are included. The final chapter covers
series-spanning gay and lesbian themes, and provides a thematically
organized list of works and authors.
This book describes the technologies that enable real-world robots
and drones to be effective killers, including an overview of how
artificial intelligence and nanotechnology relate to the topic. It
also examines social controversies swirling around the design and
use of killer robots, such as whether fully-autonomous, robotic
weapons should be banned. Although robots are a modern invention,
examples of robot precursors date back to ancient times. This book
identifies and examines the monsters, artificial beings, and
fictional machines that are precursors of real 21st century killer
robots and drones. Examples of precursors include the golem,
Frankenstein's monster, and the ethical robots of Isaac Asimov.
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