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Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Contents; Introduction; Multimodal Interaction Standards; Speech and Multimodal Interaction; Multimodal Interaction Standards; How the Standards Fit Together; Formats for Controlling Processors; Communications Among Components; Representation of Input and Output; Representing Uninterpreted Input; Representing Interpreted User Input; Extensible Multimodal Annotation; Emotion ML; Representing the Semantics of System Output; EMMA 2.0; Overview of Sections; Part I Standards; Part II Platforms; Part III Applications; Part IV Future Directions; References.

Part I: StandardsChapter 1: Introduction to the Multimodal Architecture Specification; 1.1 Overview; 1.2 The Architecture; 1.3 The Interfaces; 1.4 Some Examples; 1.5 Adding a New Modality Component; 1.6 Conclusion; References; Chapter 2: The Role and Importance of Speech Standards; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Quick Tour of W3C VBWG Major Standards; 2.2.1 VoiceXML 2.0; 2.2.2 VoiceXML 2.1; 2.2.3 SRGS 1.0; 2.2.4 SISR 1.0; 2.2.5 SSML 1.0 and 1.1; 2.2.6 PLS 1.0; 2.2.7 CCXML 1.0; 2.3 IETF, Companion Protocols; 2.4 Current Trends and Future Evolutions; 2.4.1 IVR in the Multi-Channel World.

2.4.2 Virtual Assistants2.4.3 Multimodal Interfaces; 2.4.4 Internet of Things; 2.5 Conclusion; References; Chapter 3: Extensible Multimodal Annotation for Intelligent Interactive Systems; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 The Basics of EMMA; 3.3 Capturing Ambiguity and Non-determinacy; 3.4 Groups, Sequences, and Derivations; 3.5 Extending EMMA to System Outputs; 3.6 JSON Representation for EMMA; 3.7 Conclusion; References; 4: EmotionML; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Use Cases and Requirements; 4.3 Previous Work; 4.4 Emotion Markup Language Elements; 4.4.1 Representations of Emotion.

4.4.2 Mechanism for Referring to an Emotion Vocabulary4.4.3 Meta-Information; 4.4.4 References to the ``Rest of the World;́́ 4.4.5 Time; 4.4.6 Representing Continuous Values and Dynamic Changes; 4.5 Vocabularies; 4.6 Applications; 4.6.1 Data Annotation; 4.6.2 Emotion Recognition; 4.6.3 Emotion Generation; 4.6.4 Platforms and Projects; 4.7 Conclusions; References; Chapter 5: Introduction to SCXML; 5.1 Overview; 5.2 Basic State Machine Concepts; 5.3 Extensions to Basic State Machines; 5.3.1 Data Model; 5.4 Operations and Conditions; 5.5 Executable Content; 5.6 External Communications.

5.7 Invoking Platform Resources5.8 Compound States; 5.9 Selecting Transitions; 5.10 Parallel States; 5.11 Conclusion; References; 6: Dialogue Act Annotation with the ISO 24617-2 Standard; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Annotating with ISO 24617-2; 6.2.1 Features of the ISO 25617-2 Annotation Standard; 6.2.2 Multidimensional Segmentation; 6.2.3 The Dialogue Act Markup Language (DiAML); 6.3 Experiences in the Use of ISO 24617-2; 6.3.1 Communicative Function Recognition; 6.3.2 Dimension Recognition; 6.3.3 Machine-Learned Dialogue Act Recognition; 6.3.4 Qualifier Recognition; 6.4 Annotated Corpora.

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