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While much has been written about the areas of text generation, text
planning, discourse modeling, and user modeling, Johanna Moore's book
is one of the first to tackle modeling the complex dynamics of
explanatory dialogues. It describes an explanation-planning
architecture that enables a computational system to participate in an
interactive dialogue with its users, focusing on the knowledge
structures that a system must build in order to elaborate or clarify
prior utterances, or to answer follow-up questions in the context of
an ongoing dialogue.
Moore develops a model of explanation generation and describes a fully
implemented natural-language system that is embedded in an existing
expert system and that includes a generation component. Her main
thesis is that shallow approaches to explanation such as paraphrasing
the expert system's line of reasoning or filling in an explanation
"schema" are not adequate for supporting dialogue, and that a more
flexible approach is needed, one that is adaptive to context, aware of
what is being said, and of what has gone before in the user's dialogue
with the expert system. She argues that the problem with prior
approaches is that they do not provide a representation of the
intended effects of the components of an explanation, nor how these
intentions are related to one another or to the rhetorical structure
of the text. She proposes a computational solution to the question of
how explanations can be synthesized in such a way that a system can
later reason about the explanations it has produced to affect its
subsequent utterances.
ACL-MIT Series in Natural Language Processing
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