On 6/14/2014 8:10 PM, Michael Torrie wrote:
On 06/13/2014 03:05 PM, Eric S. Johansson wrote:
I appreciate any insight before I go too far off track.
--- eric
Perhaps this is off-topic, and doesn't answer your question, but is
Parsley a natural language parsing tool? If not, and if it is natural
language that you're trying to parse, maybe you should see if the
natural language toolkit would be more appropriate to your needs.
Natural language is a rathole that many people go down when trying to
build the speech user interface. In reality, all you need is something
vaguely resembling normal language use. Something close enough to
natural language that it's easy to remember but succinct enough that you
don't burn out your speech capabilities. An example of this is my task
log. It looks like this
16-Jun-2014 11:46 esj: start
I did something today. No really. I started work on time and I finished
on time
16-Jun-2014 15:46 esj: end
day: 4 hours
...
week: ...
The speech grammar is "job stamp (start| end)". "Job stamp start" simply
puts in the timestamp as seen above. "Job stamp end" adds the ending
time stamp plus the day hours calculation. When I produce a report, the
day and week numbers are recalculated in case I changed something
manually. The calculation is then displayed so I can build an invoice.
This model is speech friendly on two levels. Grammar is simple and
automates is much as it can. Second, if I didn't have the grammar and
macro capability, I could still speak the magic keywords without too
much stress. There's another level of speech friendliness. I also have
"time stamp"11:57, "date stamp" Jun 16, 2014, and "log stamp"
16-Jun-2014 esj: since they are all related and similar in construction,
it's easier to remember.
There's another aspect to natural language that is a bit of rathole. In
my opinion, a good speech interface uses a combination of visual and
speech elements. For example you should be of the see something on the
screen and speak to it. This implies that the speech application can
read the contents of the visual application so it can make the right
decisions regarding grammar.
This usually isn't possible because visual applications don't reveal
appropriate content at the right level. The best we can do now is a bit
of screen and menu scraping of highly decimated information that has
lost all context. grumble
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