How to make a wheelchair understand spoken commands
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
00107390-1.pdf | 2.4 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Other Titles: | Wie man einem Rollstuhl beibringt, gesprochene Befehle zu verstehen | Authors: | Couto-Vale, Daniel ![]() |
Supervisor: | Bateman, John | 1. Expert: | Bateman, John | Experts: | Cimiano, Philipp | Abstract: | In this thesis, I aimed at recognising a wheelchair user' s intent when making commands to an intelligent wheelchair, relying on what the user meant by the words chosen, the situation the interactants are in, and the ongoing discourse of interaction, making use of only symbolic processing. For this purpose, I created a language-based taxonomy of simple things, locations and processes that could be integrated into a rule-based understanding module, composed of a speech recogniser, a CCG-based text analyser, trackers of states and changes in the environment and four mechanisms to integrate contextual features: a material thing integrator for identifying referents in the surroundings, a figure integrator for ascertaining the participant roles referents should take in described events, a nexus integrator for relating represented events back to the current states in the situation and forward to potential desired states, and a dialogue move integrator for recognising how an utterance moves the dialogue forwards. With this integration mechanism, I achieved 95% task success rate in an evaluation experiment conducted within a simulated apartment and wheelchair viewed from above. |
Keywords: | Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL); Combinatory Categorial Grammar (CCG); embodied assistant; intelligent wheelchair; human adult language; spoken commands; understanding | Issue Date: | 6-May-2019 | Type: | Dissertation | Secondary publication: | no | URN: | urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00107390-16 | Institution: | Universität Bremen | Faculty: | Fachbereich 10: Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaften (FB 10) |
Appears in Collections: | Dissertationen |
Page view(s)
493
checked on Apr 6, 2025
Download(s)
450
checked on Apr 6, 2025
Google ScholarTM
Check
Items in Media are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.