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Pragmatics and Discourse

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Title: Pragmatics and Discourse


1
Pragmatics and Discourse
  • (Doing things with language)

2
Cohesion and coherence
  • Cohesion surface relations that underlie a
    text/conversation objective, measurable
  • Coherence conceptual relations that underlie a
    text/conversation subjective, impressionistic
  • Dependent on expectations and real-world
    experience, cultural background
  • Critical aspects of good textual, verbal
    communication
  • Socio-cultural norms vary, complicate
  • Conscious variance for implicature

3
Implications and entailment
  • What the speaker/writer means or implies (vs.
    what s/he literally says)
  • English kill cause become dead
  • Conversational implicature discourse
    obligations, (im)plausible conclusions
  • Philosophy, formal logic has much to contribute
    to this area

4
Propositional calculus
  • Representing propositions as atomic symbolse.g.
    p John is hungry. q John eats Cheerios.
  • Connectives , V, , ?
  • p ? q
  • p ? q

5
Specifying coherence
  • Assumes some semantic mapping (e.g. predicate
    calculus)
  • Theorem-proving, inferencing, consistency
    checking
  • Axiomatic foundations
  • Take drunk friends keysX drunk ? dont want X
    to drivedont want X to drive ? take away Xs
    keysdont want X to have Y ? hide Y from
    Xcausality is transitive

6
Dialogue analysis, design
  • Analyzing dialogues
  • Turn-taking, linguistic content, pauses
  • Appointment scheduling, conference registration,
    travel planning (airlines)
  • Annotating corpora
  • Use in conversational systems (TRAINS, JANUS,
    VERBMOBIL)
  • Active area in e-business, chatterbots

7
TRAINS dialogue
  • utt1 s hello can I help you
  • utt2 u yeah I want t- I want to determine
    the maximum number of boxcars of
  • oranges that I can get to Bath
    by seven a.m.
  • tomorrow morning
  • utt3 so hm
  • so I guess all the boxcars will have
    to go through oran-
  • through Corning because that's where
    the orange juice
  • orange factory is
  • utt4 so from Corning to Bath how far is
    that
  • utt5 s two hours
  • utt6 u and it's gonna take us also an hour
    to load boxcars right
  • utt7 s right
  • utt8 u okay so hm so every
    trip will take at least
  • three hours then
  • utt9 um
  • utt10 s right we can unload any amount of
    cargo onto a train in one hour
  • utt11 so we can do a maximum of
    three boxcars in an hour
  • utt12 u right okay
  • utt13 okay so I guess one thing we
    can do oh so

8
Scripts
  • E.g. action BUY(e)
  • Roles buyer, seller, object, money
  • Constraints Human(buyer), SalesAgent(seller),
    IsObject(object), Value(money, Price(object))
  • Preconditions AT(buyer, Loc(seller)),
    OWNS(buyer,money), Owns(seller,object)
  • Effects Owns(buyer,money), Owns(seller,object),
    Owns(buyer,object), Owns(seller,money)
  • Decomposition GIVE(buyer,seller,money),
    GIVE(seller,buyer,object)

9
Other issues
  • Implication, entailment, presupposition
  • Thematic presentation strategies
  • Serialization strategies (addresses, lists of
    languages, etc.)
  • Socio-cultural norms for language use (forms of
    address, taboo, etc.)
  • Motivated deviation from pragmatic norms

10
Conversational implicature
  • What you imply by saying something
  • Not always to be taken literally

11
Conversational maxims (Grice)
  • Quantity be sufficiently verbose
  • Not more/less informative than necessary
  • Quality be truthful
  • Dont say what you know is false or unsupported
  • Relevance be relevant
  • Say only things that are relevant
  • Manner be perspicuous
  • Say things unambiguously, clearly, briefly,
    orderly

12
Examples?
  • A What are you reading?B A book.
  • A Whats the capital of Canada?B Montreal.A
    Sure, and New Orleans is the capital of the
    U.S.A.
  • A What time is it?B Well, the paperboy already
    came.

13
Quality
  • John has 2 degrees.(implication I believe he
    has 2, I have adequate evidence)
  • A Whats the weather like?B Its snowing.
    (implication adequate evidence)

14
Quantity
  • A Do you have the time?B ?Yes.
  • A What color is the American flag?B ?White.
  • A Could you tell me when the flight from Chicago
    arrives?B ?Yes.
  • A How many children do you have?B ?Two. (but
    in reality 4)

15
Relevance
  • A Would you like to go to a movie tonight?B ?I
    have an exam tomorrow.

16
Flouting the maxims
  • Purposely violating conventions in order to
    convey an intended meaning
  • Carries conversational implicature

17
Flouting relevance
  • A Would you like to go to a movie tonight?B I
    have to comb my hair.
  • A Would you like some fresh brownies?B Is the
    pope Catholic?
  • A Have you read the Bible?B I dont read
    science fiction!

18
Flouting quantity
  • A Do you have the time?B Yes.
  • A What are you reading?B A book.

19
Flouting quality
  • You are the cream in my Postum

20
Flouting manner
  • Walk up to the door, stop, turn doorknob
    clockwise as far as it will go, then pull the
    door gently towards you.(vs. Open the door.)
  • Thats the man Mary is living with. (if hes her
    husband)
  • Mary produced a series of sounds that
    corresponded loosely to the score of Home Sweet
    Home.

21
Other issues
  • Thematic presentation strategies
  • Serialization strategies
  • Socio-cultural norms for language use (forms of
    address, taboo, etc.)
  • Motivated deviation from pragmatic norms

22
Speech Acts
  • While saying something, or after having said it,
    we DO (accomplish) something with our utterance
    performatives
  • Felicity conds (else misfire A,B, abuse B)
  • Must exist a conventional procedure, effects
    situation and persons must follow
  • Procedure must be executed correctly and
    completely
  • Participants must have requisite thoughts,
    feelings, intentions subsequent conduct followed

23
Example speech acts
  • I bet you six dollars it will snow tomorrow.
  • I hereby christen this ship the USS Clinton.
  • I apologize.
  • I therefore sentence you to 5 years hard labor.
  • I bequeath you my 1830 edition of the BoM.
  • I declare war on Iraq.
  • I give you my word.
  • I pledge my allegiance

24
Assumptions and obligations
  • Preparatory conditions
  • S is able to perform A (May I breathe for you?)
  • H wants S to perform A (May I kill your cat
    now?)
  • Sincerity conditions (S intends A)
  • Propositional conditions
  • S1 promise A ? S1 achieve A
  • S1 request A ? S2 address R accept/reject A
  • S1 YNQ whether P ? S2 answer-if P
  • Essential conditions (S obliged to do A)

25
Act types
  • Locutionary act uttering of the sentence
  • Illocutionary act whether making promise, offer,
    statement, etc.
  • Perlocutionary effect effects on hearer(s)
  • Shoot him!
  • Its cold in here.
  • Do you know what time it is?

26
Sample computer applications
  • Script, story, report generation (PAF, smoking
    cessation, stock updates)
  • Entertainment (chatterbots)
  • Data summarization (text, image, graphics)
  • Machine translation (weather, avalanche
    bulletins, speech translation)
  • Multi-agent interaction (humanoids)

27
Conversation
  • Interactive dialogue
  • Leverages the common ground
  • Contextual information
  • Situational information
  • Beliefs, beliefs about beliefs, etc.
  • Agendas
  • Implicature
  • What you imply by saying something
  • Not always to be taken literally
  • Turn-taking, acknowledgement, etc.

28
Dialogue analysis, design
  • Analyzing dialogues
  • Turn-taking, linguistic content, pauses
  • Appointment scheduling, conference registration,
    travel planning (airlines)
  • Corpora are used, annotated
  • Use in conversational systems (TRAINS, JANUS,
    VERBMOBIL)
  • Active area in e-business, chatterbots

29
Dialogue Move Engines
  • Computer systems (usually agents) that explicitly
    manage dialogues
  • Participants
  • Common ground
  • Plans
  • Beliefs
  • Agenda
  • Used in many interactive NLP scenarios

30
Godis
31
Chatterbots
  • Computer programs (usually agents) that hold
    conversations with people
  • Most limited to specific domains (e.g. Hampy)
  • The Loebner contest
  • An average interrogator will not have more than
    a 70 chance of making the right identification
    after five minutes of questioning (1950)
  • 6 c-bots, 4 humans (teacher, MBA, minister,
    yogi), 10 judges (linguist, chemist, 2 phils,
    musician, psychist, journalist, ugrad, author,
    grad)
  • 91 correct after 5 minutes, 93 after 15
  • No computer was mistaken for a human.

32
Sample bot chatter
  • A I like techno, especially retro-electronic
    like Kraftwerk. I like 70's bands like ABBA. Also
    I like Opera.
  • J ALICE LIKES ABBA
  • A That's me. My favorite group is Kraftwerk.
  • J FIGURES
  • A No but I know a lot of female humans.
  • J DO YOU SPEAK ANY SWEDISH
  • A I speak only English right now, but I'd like
    to learn some other languages. Can you teach me a
    few phrases in Any Swedish.
  • J SURE
  • A OK let's do it. Tell me more.
  • J SWEDISH FOR COMPUTOR IS DATOR
  • A How do you usually introduce yourself?
  • J WOMAN IS KVINNA SO I GUESS YOU ARE A KVINNLIG
    DATOR
  • A What do you look like?
  • J I LOOK TONS DIFFERENT FROM YOU
  • A You sound very attractive.
  • J HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF BY THE WAY
  • A It is a good question. Let me think about it.
    I can ask someone about it.

33
Basic discourse production
34
Gedquiz
  • Provide high-level insight into GEDCOM data
  • Endow system with omniscient viewpoint (modulo
    closed-world assumption)
  • Create learning/tutoring environment for
    acquiring/testing holistic genealogical knowledge
  • Situate activities in natural goal-directed
    dialogues, conversations
  • Leverage reasoning techniques, pragmatics

35
System architecture
36
Conversation
  • Interactive dialogue
  • Leverages the common ground
  • Contextual information
  • Situational information
  • Beliefs, beliefs about beliefs, etc.
  • Agendas
  • Implicature
  • What you imply by saying something
  • Not always to be taken literally
  • Turn-taking, acknowledgement, etc.
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