Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
(1978)
Investigating the process of natural - language communication : A status report
D. Brenneis, L. Lein (1977)
“You Fruithead”: A Sociolinguistic Approach to Children's Dispute Settlement
D. Levy (1979)
Communicative Goals and Strategies: Between Discourse and Syntax in Discourse and Syntax., 12
E. Sacerdoti (1974)
Planning in a Hierarchy of Abstraction SpacesArtif. Intell., 5
W. Chafe (1977)
The flow of thought and the flow of language
B. Grosz (1989)
Utterance and Objective: Issues in Natural Language CommunicationAI Mag., 1
Bertram Bruce, Denis Newman (1978)
Interacting plansCogn. Sci., 2
I. Allen, C. Perrault (1978)
Participating in dialogues: understanding via plan deduction
(1975)
Non-monotonic logic I, A.I. Memo 486
R. Freedle (1978)
Discourse production and comprehensionAmerican Journal of Psychology, 91
(1979)
A computational perspective on indefinite reference
C. Fillmore (1979)
Innocence: A Second Idealization for Linguistics, 5
(1977)
Opening encounters . Aorerica , l Sociological Review
R. Wilensky (1978)
Understanding Goal-Based Stories
(1972)
Side sequences . In D . N . Sudnow ( Ed . ) . S & ies in socitrl intercrction . 294338
(1979)
A plots-I~used approuclt to speech (XI recognirion
R. Kowalski (1982)
Logic for problem solvingACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes, 7
E. Sacerdoti (1977)
A Structure for Plans and Behavior
R. Turner (1976)
UTTERANCE POSITIONING AS AN INTERACTIONAL RESOURCE, 17
D. McDermott, J. Doyle (1987)
Non-Monotonic Logic IArtif. Intell., 13
J. Dore, R. Mcdermott (1982)
Linguistic indeterminacy and social context in utterance interpretationLanguage, 58
R. Keeney, H. Raiffa, D. Rajala (1977)
Decisions with Multiple Objectives: Preferences and Value Trade-OffsIEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 9
(1979)
Why Ask ?
C. Linde, W. Labov (1975)
Spatial Networks as a Site for the Study of Language and Thought.Language, 51
(1978)
Hobbs, J
A. Kendon (1967)
Some functions of gaze-direction in social interaction.Acta psychologica, 26 1
J. Searle (1969)
Speech Acts: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language
W. Mann, James Moore, J. Levin (1977)
A Comprehension Model for Human Dialogue
Beaugrande Beaugrande (1980)
The pragmatics of discourse planning. To appearJournal of Pragmatics, 3
R. Fikes, N. Nilsson (1971)
STRIPS: A New Approach to the Application of Theorem Proving to Problem SolvingArtif. Intell., 2
James Allen (1979)
A plan-based approach to speech act recognition
J. McCarthy (1987)
Epistemological Problems of Artificial Intelligence
Philip Cohen (1978)
On knowing what to say: planning speech acts.
E. Wynn (1980)
What Discourse Features Aren't Needed in On-Line Dialogue?
(1975)
The intonational disambiguation of indirect speech acts
(1978)
Conversational coherency . TR - 1778
(1979)
Communicative goals and strategies : Between discourse and syntax . In T . Given ( Ed . ) , Swrtm crnd . semtrntics , Vol . 12
(1976)
A study of some argument-forms in a persuasion dialog
(1977)
Opening encounters. Aorerica,l
W. Mann, James Moore, James Lewin, James Carlisle (1975)
Observation Methods for Human Dialogue.
A. Newell, J. Shaw, H. Simon (1959)
Report on a general problem-solving program
B. Hayes-Roth, F. Hayes-Roth, S. Rosenschein, Stephanie Cammarata (1979)
Modeling Planning as an Incremental, Opportunistic Process
Purposeful questions and pointed ’ answers
A. Tate (1975)
Interacting Goals And Their Use
B. Grosz (1977)
The representation and use of focus in dialogue understanding.
Schiffrin Schiffrin (1977)
Opening encountersAmerican Sociological Review, 42
(1978)
Modelling communication as a problem solving activity
Harvey Sacks, E. Schegloff, G. Jefferson (1974)
A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking for conversationLanguage, 50
G. Sussman (1975)
A Computer Model of Skill Acquisition
(1977)
Strategy and tactics : A model for language production
(1972)
Sudnow (Ed.) .S&ies in socitrl intercrction. 294338
Jerry Hobbs (1978)
Why Is Discourse Coherent
L. Polanyi (1978)
The American story : cultural constraints on the meaning and structure of stories in conversation
Halliday Halliday (1977)
Structure and function in languageSyntax and semantics, 12
R. Waldinger (1977)
Achieving several goals simultaneouslyMachine intelligence
(1972)
Non-verbal communication in human social interaction
(1978)
Definite reference and mutual knowledge. Paper presented at the Sloan Workshop on Computational Aspects of Linguistic Structure and Discourse Setting
(1974)
Labov, W
(1975)
A comparer orodel of skill acquisition
(1980)
The pragmatics of discourse planning . To appear in Jounto / of Proputics
C. Rieger, M. Grinberg (1977)
The Declarative Representation and Procedural Simulation of Causality in Physical Mechanisms
C. Linde, J. Goguen (1978)
Structure of planning discourseJournal of Social and Biological Structures, 1
(1979)
The conduit metaphor - A case of frame conflict in our language about language . In A . Ortony ( Ed ) , Merophor crud rhoughf . 284 - 324
The sociolinguistic basis of speech act theory
(1969)
Pros&c svsre,n.s cr,rd intmrrtim in English
A. Newell (1973)
Human Problem Solving
(1973)
Mu/rip/e crifericr decision muking
R. Beaugrande (1980)
The pragmatics of discourse planningJournal of Pragmatics, 4
In this paper, planning models developed in artificial intelligence are applied to the kind of planning that must be carried out by participants in a conversation. A planning mechanism is defined, and a short fragment of a free‐flowing videotaped conversation is described. The bulk of the paper is then devoted to an attempt to understand the conversation in terms of the planning mechanism. This microanalysis suggests ways in which the planning mechanism must be augmented, and reveals several important conversational phenomena that deserve further investigation.
Cognitive Science: A Multidisciplinary Journal – Wiley
Published: Oct 1, 1980
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.