story character
Quantifying Discourse Support for Omitted Pronouns
Zhang, Shulin, Li, Jixing, Hale, John
Pro-drop is commonly seen in many languages, but its discourse motivations have not been well characterized. Inspired by the topic chain theory in Chinese, this study shows how character-verb usage continuity distinguishes dropped pronouns from overt references to story characters. We model the choice to drop vs. not drop as a function of character-verb continuity. The results show that omitted subjects have higher character history-current verb continuity salience than non-omitted subjects. This is consistent with the idea that discourse coherence with a particular topic, such as a story character, indeed facilitates the omission of pronouns in languages and contexts where they are optional.
Towards an Empathizing and Adaptive Storyteller System
Bae, Byung Chull (IT University of Copenhagen) | Brunete, Alberto (Carlos III University) | Malik, Usman (National University of Sciences and Technology) | Dimara, Evanthia (Université Paris-Sud) | Jermsurawong, Jermsak (New York University Abu Dhabi) | Mavridis, Nikolaos ( New York University Abu Dhabi )
This paper describes our ongoing effort to build an empathizing and adaptive storyteller system. The system under development aims to utilize emotional expressions generated from an avatar or a humanoid robot in addition to the listener’s responses which are monitored in real time, in order to deliver a story in an effective manner. We conducted a pilot study and the results were analyzed in two ways: first, through a survey questionnaire analysis based on the participant’s subjective ratings; second, through automated video analysis based on the participant’s emotional facial expression and eye blinking. The survey questionnaire results show that male participants have a tendency of more empathizing with a story character when a virtual storyteller is present, as compared to audio-only narration. The video analysis results show that the number of eye blinking of the participants is thought to be reciprocal to their attention.
The Intentional Fast-Forward Narrative Planner
Ware, Stephen G. (North Carolina State University)
The Intentional Fast-Forward (IFF) planner is an attempt to apply fast forward-chaining state-space search methods to intentional planning---planning such that every action is directed toward some character's goal. The IFF heuristic is based on Hoffmann's original Fast Forward heuristic (2001), which solves a simplified version of the problem and uses that solution as a guide for the real problem. IFF incorporates constraints imposed by intentional planning to narrow down the set of steps which can be taken next, and it identifies fruitless branches of the search space early.