Towards a computational generation of récit: evaluating the perception of the récit plan
In 1st International Workshop on Data-to-Text Generation. 3 pages. 2015.
Belén A. Baez Miranda, Sybille Caffiau, Catherine Garbay, François Portet
Abstract
The  aim  for  this  PhD  project  is  to  generate  stories about human activities from real ambient data.
Computational  Narratology  (CN)  is  the  study  of narratives from the point of view of computation and information processing (Mani, 2012). 
Most of the current researches in CN are related to creativity, where the stories emerge from a set of predefined parameters, trying to imitate literary genres like fairy tales (Riedl and Young,  2010).  
In this paper we are interested in stories emerging from real ambient data for which we have no control.
We name these stories ”activity récits”.
One  challenge  addressed  is  the  coherence  between a story plan (i.e. a sequence of events) rendered as text read by humans and real activity performed  by  actors  and  gathered  through  sensors.
This paper aims to present an evaluation of the perception of the story plan from a tool employed to express human activities:  a task model sequence.

