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ABSTRACT
A Question-Answering System (QAS) is impertinent if it tells a user something the user did not ask! Since a user rarely understands the full implications of a data base, especially a large one, his question is limited by his knowledge of the data base. Sometimes, a question similar to the one he originally asked could better satisfy his goals, but he did not ask it because he had no reason to do so. Hence, impertinence is a necessary feature of sophisticated QAS. We describe a complete theory for impertinent QAS. The QAS is impertinent when, and only when, a small change in the question results in a large positive change in the answer, i.e., in the presence of a discontinuity. (The metrics are user dependent.) In impertinent QAS, the user's: “Why didn't you tell me?" answered by “BUT YOU DIDN'T ASK!," no longer occur. The theory has been implemented in a sophisticated airline tariff system.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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ACM SIGART Newsletter, No. 61, 1977.
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Siklóssy, L., Question-Asking Question-Answering Systems, in Proc. International Seminar on Intelligent Question-Answering and Data Base Systems, J-C Simon and L. Siklóssy, eds. (IRIA, Rocquencourt, France, 1978).
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Kaplan, J., 1978 ACM National Conference Proceedings (this issue).
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