DIALOGUE STRATEGIES FOR VOCABULARY LEARNING User Initiative in Dialogue Systems for Second Language Learning
Abstract
When building efficient dialogue systems, a major challenge is recovering from miscommunication. Analyzing
human-human interaction leads to discovering repair strategies that contribute towards conversational
systems able to communicate in a natural and effective way. This thesis aims to identify recurring dialogue
strategies (conversational patterns) commonly used among second language (L2) learners when acquiring
new vocabulary by means of analyzing second language learner corpora. We further provide a simple theoretical
model along with an implementation thereof capable of reproducing the most frequent patterns
observed in our data and later embedded in a vocabulary training activity designed for the second language
classroom. We found instances of production problems and code-switching taking place together caused
by a poor linguistic competence in the target language. We showed that learners ask (either explicitly or
implicitly) for the L2 word/expression they need and, once it is provided, learners repeat it as part of the
strategy for acquiring new L2 vocabulary. We believe the findings of this thesis can be of value to dialogue
systems for second language learning. Future work includes an extended implementation and exploring
larger amounts of data.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2022-10-06Author
Carrión del Fresno, Andrea
Keywords
spoken dialogue systems, second language learning, repair strategies, code-switching, production problem
Language
eng