Nicolov, Nicolas
AAAI 2006 Spring Symposium Reports
Abecker, Andreas, Alami, Rachid, Baral, Chitta, Bickmore, Tim, Durfee, Ed, Fong, Terry, Goker, Mehmet H., Green, Nancy, Liberman, Mark, Lebiere, Christian, Martin, James H., Mentzas, Gregoris, Musliner, Dave, Nicolov, Nicolas, Nourbakhsh, Illah, Salvetti, Franco, Shapiro, Daniel, Schrekenghost, Debbie, Sheth, Amit, Stojanovic, Ljiljana, SunSpiral, Vytas, Wray, Robert
AAAI 2006 Spring Symposium Reports
Abecker, Andreas, Alami, Rachid, Baral, Chitta, Bickmore, Tim, Durfee, Ed, Fong, Terry, Goker, Mehmet H., Green, Nancy, Liberman, Mark, Lebiere, Christian, Martin, James H., Mentzas, Gregoris, Musliner, Dave, Nicolov, Nicolas, Nourbakhsh, Illah, Salvetti, Franco, Shapiro, Daniel, Schrekenghost, Debbie, Sheth, Amit, Stojanovic, Ljiljana, SunSpiral, Vytas, Wray, Robert
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, in cooperation with Stanford University's Computer Science Department, was pleased to present its 2006 Spring Symposium Series held March 27-29, 2006, at Stanford University, California. The titles of the eight symposia were (1) Argumentation for Consumers of Health Care (chaired by Nancy Green); (2) Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Cognitive Science Principles Meet AI Hard Problems (chaired by Christian Lebiere); (3) Computational Approaches to Analyzing Weblogs (chaired by Nicolas Nicolov); (4) Distributed Plan and Schedule Management (chaired by Ed Durfee); (5) Formalizing and Compiling Background Knowledge and Its Applications to Knowledge Representation and Question Answering (chaired by Chitta Baral); (6) Semantic Web Meets e-Government (chaired by Ljiljana Stojanovic); (7) To Boldly Go Where No Human-Robot Team Has Gone Before (chaired by Terry Fong); and (8) What Went Wrong and Why: Lessons from AI Research and Applications (chaired by Dan Shapiro).
Natural Language Assistant: A Dialog System for Online Product Recommendation
Chai, Joyce, Horvath, Veronika, Nicolov, Nicolas, Stys, Margo, Kambhatla, Nanda, Zadrozny, Wlodek, Melville, Prem
With the emergence of electronic-commerce systems, successful information access on electroniccommerce web sites becomes essential. To provide an efficient solution for information access, we have built the NATURAL language ASSISTANT (NLA), a web-based natural language dialog system to help users find relevant products on electronic-commerce sites. The system brings together technologies in natural language processing and human-computer interaction to create a faster and more intuitive way of interacting with web sites. By combining statistical parsing techniques with traditional AI rule-based technology, we have created a dialog system that accommodates both customer needs and business requirements.
Natural Language Assistant: A Dialog System for Online Product Recommendation
Chai, Joyce, Horvath, Veronika, Nicolov, Nicolas, Stys, Margo, Kambhatla, Nanda, Zadrozny, Wlodek, Melville, Prem
With the emergence of electronic-commerce systems, successful information access on electroniccommerce web sites becomes essential. Menu-driven navigation and keyword search currently provided by most commercial sites have considerable limitations because they tend to overwhelm and frustrate users with lengthy, rigid, and ineffective interactions. To provide an efficient solution for information access, we have built the NATURAL language ASSISTANT (NLA), a web-based natural language dialog system to help users find relevant products on electronic-commerce sites. The system brings together technologies in natural language processing and human-computer interaction to create a faster and more intuitive way of interacting with web sites. By combining statistical parsing techniques with traditional AI rule-based technology, we have created a dialog system that accommodates both customer needs and business requirements. The system is currently embedded in an application for recommending laptops and was deployed as a pilot on IBM's web site.