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Spoken language interfaces are being incorporated into various devices (e.g. smart-phones, smart TVs, etc). However, current technology typically limits conversational interactions to a few narrow predefined domains/topics. For example, dialogue systems for smartphone operation fail to respond when users ask for functions not supported by currently installed applications. We propose to dynamically add application-based domains according to users' requests by using descriptions of applications as a retrieval cue to find relevant applications. The approach uses structured knowledge resources (e.g. Freebase, Wikipedia, FrameNet) to induce types of slots for generating semantic seeds, and enriches the semantics of spoken queries with neural word embeddings, where semantically related concepts can be additionally included for acquiring knowledge that does not exist in the predefined domains. The system can then retrieve relevant applications or dynamically suggest users install applications that support unexplored domains. We find that vendor descriptions provide a reliable source of information for this purpose.
Chen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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