Comparing Human-Human to Human-Computer Tutorial Dialogue

Author(s):  
Natalie B. Steinhauser ◽  
Gwendolyn E. Campbell ◽  
Katherine M. Harrison ◽  
Leanne S. Taylor ◽  
Myroslava O. Dzikovska ◽  
...  
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myroslava O. Dzikovska ◽  
Natalie B. Steinhauser ◽  
Johanna D. Moore ◽  
Gwendolyn E. Campbell ◽  
Katherine M. Harrison ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Myroslava O. Dzikovska ◽  
Natalie B. Steinhauser ◽  
Johanna D. Moore ◽  
Gwendolyn E. Campbell ◽  
Katherine M. Harrison ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 216-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert B. Graham

This article describes a computer tutorial that teaches the fundamentals of consequences and contingencies in operant teaming. The tutorial content is appropriate for courses in general psychology, learning, and behavioral programming. Applications to animal and human situations are emphasized. The software repeats questions until the student is able to provide the correct answer, but spaces its repetitions to maximize retention. It saves student records as a basis for assignment of course credit. Student reaction to this form of presentation was very favorable. Questionnaire data showed that the students perceived the tutor as more useful in preparing for a test than a text or study guide would have been.


Author(s):  
Vincent Aleven ◽  
Amy Ogan ◽  
Octav Popescu ◽  
Cristen Torrey ◽  
Kenneth Koedinger

Author(s):  
Jeff Rickel ◽  
Neal Lesh ◽  
Charles Rich ◽  
Candace L. Sidner ◽  
Abigail Gertner

2007 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 199-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur C. Graesser ◽  
Moongee Jeon ◽  
Yan Yan ◽  
Zhiqiang Cai

Discourse cohesion is presumably an important facilitator of comprehension when individuals read texts and hold conversations. This study investigated components of cohesion and language in different types of discourse about Newtonian physics: A textbook, textoids written by experimental psychologists, naturalistic tutorial dialoguebetween expert human tutors and college students, andAutoTutor tutorial dialogue between a computer tutor and students (AutoTutor is an animated pedagogical agent that helps students learn about physics by holding conversations in natural language). We analyzed the four types of discourse with Coh-Metrix, a software tool that measures discourse on different components of cohesion, language, and readability. The cohesion indices included co-reference, syntactic and semantic similarity, causal cohesion, incidence of cohesion signals (e.g., connectives, logical operators), and many other measures. Cohesion data were quite similar for the two forms of discourse in expository monologue (textbooks and textoids) and for the two types of tutorial dialogue (i.e., students interacting with human tutors and AutoTutor), but very different between the discourse of expository monologue and tutorial dialogue. Coh-Metrix was also able to detect subtle differences in the language and discourse of AutoTutor versus human tutoring.


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