https://ris.uni-paderborn.de
2000-01-01T00:00+00:001monthlyStudying Writing in Second Person: A Response to Joshua Parker
https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9212
Mildorf, Jarmila2013https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9212enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessMildorf J. Studying Writing in Second Person: A Response to Joshua Parker. <i>Connotations: Journal for Critical Debate</i>. 2013;23(1):63-78.Studying Writing in Second Person: A Response to Joshua Parkerinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articledoc-type:articletexthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501'Unnatural’ Narratives? The Case of Second-Person Narration
https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9237
Mildorf, JarmilaHatavara, MariHydén, Lars-ChristerHyvärinen, Matti2013https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9237engJohn Benjaminsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessMildorf J. 'Unnatural’ Narratives? The Case of Second-Person Narration. In: Hatavara M, Hydén L-C, Hyvärinen M, eds. <i>The Travelling Concepts of Narrative</i>. Vol 18. Studies in Narrative. John Benjamins; 2013:179-199.'Unnatural’ Narratives? The Case of Second-Person Narrationinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartdoc-type:bookParttexthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248Second-Person Narration in Literary and Conversational Storytelling
https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9214
Mildorf, Jarmila2012https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9214enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessMildorf J. Second-Person Narration in Literary and Conversational Storytelling. <i>Storyworlds</i>. 2012;4:75-98.Second-Person Narration in Literary and Conversational Storytellinginfo:eu-repo/semantics/articledoc-type:articletexthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501Reconsidering Second-Person Narration and Involvement
https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9208
Mildorf, Jarmila2016https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/9208enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessMildorf J. Reconsidering Second-Person Narration and Involvement. <i>Language and Literature</i>. 2016;25(2):145-158.Reconsidering Second-Person Narration and Involvementinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articledoc-type:articletexthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501“Mama Always Had a Way of Explaining Things So I Could Understand”: A Dialogue Corpus for Learning to Construct Explanations
https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/55337
Wachsmuth, HenningAlshomary, MiladCalzolari, NicolettaHuang, Chu-RenKim, HansaemPustejovsky, JamesWanner, LeoChoi, Key-SunRyu, Pum-MoChen, Hsin-HsiDonatelli, LuciaJi, HengKurohashi, SadaoPaggio, PatriziaXue, NianwenKim, SeokhwanHahm, YounggyunHe, ZhongLee, Tony KyungilSantus, EnricoBond, FrancisNa, Seung-Hoon2022As AI is more and more pervasive in everyday life, humans have an increasing demand to understand its behavior and decisions. Most research on explainable AI builds on the premise that there is one ideal explanation to be found. In fact, however, everyday explanations are co-constructed in a dialogue between the person explaining (the explainer) and the specific person being explained to (the explainee). In this paper, we introduce a first corpus of dialogical explanations to enable NLP research on how humans explain as well as on how AI can learn to imitate this process. The corpus consists of 65 transcribed English dialogues from the Wired video series 5 Levels, explaining 13 topics to five explainees of different proficiency. All 1550 dialogue turns have been manually labeled by five independent professionals for the topic discussed as well as for the dialogue act and the explanation move performed. We analyze linguistic patterns of explainers and explainees, and we explore differences across proficiency levels. BERT-based baseline results indicate that sequence information helps predicting topics, acts, and moves effectively.https://ris.uni-paderborn.de/record/55337engInternational Committee on Computational Linguisticsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessWachsmuth H, Alshomary M. “Mama Always Had a Way of Explaining Things So I Could Understand”: A Dialogue Corpus for Learning to Construct Explanations. In: Calzolari N, Huang C-R, Kim H, et al., eds. <i>Proceedings of the 29th International Conference on Computational Linguistics</i>. International Committee on Computational Linguistics; 2022:344–354.“Mama Always Had a Way of Explaining Things So I Could Understand”: A Dialogue Corpus for Learning to Construct Explanationsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectdoc-type:conferenceObjecttexthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794