Title:
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QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN NOTE-TAKING AND TALKING BEHAVIOR IN MEETINGS |
Author(s):
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Antje Bothin, Paul Clough |
ISBN:
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978-972-8939-20-5 |
Editors:
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Gunilla Bradley |
Year:
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2010 |
Edition:
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Single |
Keywords:
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Meetings, Note-Taking, Talking, Individual Differences |
Type:
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Short Paper |
First Page:
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172 |
Last Page:
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176 |
Language:
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English |
Cover:
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Full Contents:
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click to dowload
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Paper Abstract:
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This paper describes a novel study on the quantitative characteristics of the personal note-taking and talking behaviors of meeting participants. We investigate the effects of gender, age, native language and functional meeting participant role on peoples behavior using meeting data from the Augmented Multi-party Interaction (AMI) corpus. Our findings show that there are significant differences with participants total note-taking activities and their frequency and duration of talking based on the individual differences of gender, age, native language and functional role within the meeting. These results are useful to the developers of information and knowledge management systems. They support the creation of automatic meeting summarization techniques in producing more effective approaches, for example, by assigning a higher feature score to speech and note-taking cues of more active participant roles. |
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