The information provided here should be sufficient for you to complete the project. For those of you who are interested and want to learn more about conversational patterns and the related coding scheme that we use here (e.g. C4, etc.), see: Moore, R. J., Arar, R. (2019), Conversational UX Design: A Practitioner's Guide to the Natural Conversation Framework. ACM.
Team Contribution
During this week, as a complete team you will select three recipes for the conversational agent from cooking.pl,
to work out further in pairs for recipe selection, visual support and recipe instruction. In addition, you will set up the initial version of the cooking assistant, by creating a Dialogflow agent (See here).
You should organize your team and decide who will work on the separate subtasks of Recipe Selection, Visual Support, and Recipe Instruction. In this week, the Recipe Selection team will focus on the start of the conversation, enabling the assistant to greet and to have the user select one of the three recipes, while the Recipe Instruction team will focus on the subsequent instruction of the three recipes. The Visual Support team will incorporate visuals to enrich the conversation. More details about the separate tasks of the three pairs are given below.
Recipe Selection
This section entails the tasks to be completed by the Recipe Selection team. It will mainly involve the steps to have the user select a certain recipe from the knowledge base provided as cooking.pl
. For the recipes, multiple websites are available. For this course, we aim more or less straightforward one-pot recipes that can be made in a linear, step-by-step fashion. Therefore, simpler recipes were extracted from this website and made available in the file cooking.pl
. For inspiration, check the Cooking Assistant space for a further discussion on the recipe selection conversation.
Opening the conversation by greeting
The agent should open the conversation with a greeting, and by sharing its name (self-identify). To achieve this, add the corresponding C1 opening patterns in the
patterns.pl
file and choose a name for your chatbot.Check out the
patterns.pl
file as it contains additional instruction details. An opening pattern should be selected when the session history is still empty. Make sure that the agent self-identifies by the corresponding pattern only when anagentName/1
behavioral parameter is set.You should also introduce a greeting intent in your Dialogflow agent to allow the user to respond to the agent's greeting. Click here for instructions on how to create an intent in your Dialogflow Agent.
Enabling recipe selection
The initial version of the GOAL agent will immediately start instructing a pasta recipe, while it should only start instructing a recipe after a user request. In the coming weeks you will enable the user to choose for a recipe by specifying particular recipe features. For now, we will assume that the user knows about the different recipes to pick from, and directly mentions the name of a recipe of choice. You may also for now have the agent suggest particular recipes to the user, upon request or as part of the greeting sequence.
The first thing to do is to make sure the agent is able to recognize recipe names. To recognize which recipe the user is talking about, in your Dialogflow agent create an entity
recipe
and add the (shorthand) names of the recipes fromcooking.pl
(possibly with different variations of the recipe names). Also, add an intentrecipeRequest
to your Dialogflow agent and integrate these recipe names as entities.Now add a pattern
a50recipeName
to thepatterns.pl
file of your GOAL agent. Again, additional instructions are given in the comments of the file. As a final step, add the pattern to the agent's agenda. Make sure the agent's memory is initially empty, and check if the pattern is performed by testing your agent.
Choose Recipe Features
A recipe can have multiple features, like their name, ingredients, taste, country of origin, and cooking techniques. Your task here is to think of the three features you want to use to select a recipe (to be incorporated in week 2 and 3).
The best way to do this is to do role-playing, where one person is the cooking assistant, and the other person is the user. The user will inquire into the recipes to choose from the 60 available ones, by asking for characteristics (like recipes that are the main dish or contain fish). Note that it does not necessarily have to result in one of the three recipes that were chosen to work out further. You may check the Cooking Assistant space on confluence for an elaboration of possible recipe features and how they are used in traditional websites to facilitate recipe selection.
Repeat these role-playing conversations a couple of times, and document well how the conversation was conducted. This will not only give inspiration for the recipe features to include in your project, but may also reveal some typical conversation patterns to be used in the design of the agent (in
patterns.pl
) in the subsequent weeks.
Recipe Instruction
This section enlists the tasks to be completed by the Recipe Instruction team. The main focus is to work with instructions related to a selected recipe.
Enable Instructions of Recipes
As can be seen in the a30recipeStep pattern in ‘patterns.pl’, the agent is triggered by the user intent ‘recipeContinuer’. You need to implement such an intent in your dialogflow agent to make this workable. See this page for more information.
Enable End of Recipe
The initial version of the cooking assistant does not indicate that the final step of a recipe has been reached. It does already have a finalStep/3
predicate that is used as a marker for the final step. Modify the text generated for the finalStep intent in the text.pl
file using the built-in string_concat/3
predicate to indicate to the user that this is the last step of the recipe.
Enable Closing of Conversation
The agent should close the conversation with a farewell or a last topic check. To this end, add corresponding C4 patterns in the patterns.pl
file. A closing pattern should be selected when all patterns in the agenda have been performed. Make sure that the farewell pattern only is performed when the lastTopicCheck/0
behavioral parameter is not set.
Visual Support
Here, the main focus is to think of how visuals can provide support to decide about a recipe or improve the understanding of a recipe.
Visuals to display chosen recipe
The aim here is to design the visuals with respect to the recipe name and the instructions. The agent can thereby enrich the information communicated to the user through text and images displayed on the screen.
A first implementation is to display the name and an image related to the chosen three recipes, using HTML. In the initial GOAL code, the pasta recipe is displayed as an image in the initialization of the agent (see ‘dialog_init.mod2g’), whenever the agent says something (see ‘dialog_generation.mod2g’) and whenever the agent is waiting for the user to say something (see ‘dialog_update.mod2g’). This is obviously not a very useful way to do this. Make the PastaAglioPage rule in ‘html.pl’ more generic by displaying the recipe of choice:
Find images for the recipes that you have chosen to work out further.
Define img cards as was done for PasaAglio.
Define a rule by which the page is rendered based on the currently chosen recipe.
For recipes for which you have not added an image, you may display the name of the recipe.
Make sure that the statements in ‘dialog_generation.mod2g’, ‘dialog_init.mod2g’ and 'dialog_update.mod2g’ are updated as well, so that they will not always render the pastaAglio image.
Week - 1 Deliverable
For your Week-1 submission, you need to submit a weekly progress report in .doc format (See Guidelines).