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<Paper uid="W00-1010">
  <Title>Social Goals in Conversational Cooperation</Title>
  <Section position="2" start_page="0" end_page="0" type="intro">
    <SectionTitle>
1 Introduction
</SectionTitle>
    <Paragraph position="0"> As noticed by (Airenti et al., 1993), a dialog .participant, even when he does not commit to the domain goals of his partner (i.e., he doesn't cooperate behaviorally), typically continues to cooperate at the conversational level.</Paragraph>
    <Paragraph position="1">  \[1\] A: Do you have Marlboros? B: Uh, no. We ran out 1 \[2\] A: Can you tell me the time? * B: No. My watch is broken 2 \[3\] A: Could you give me some money  for the booze? B: I won't giv e you a dime What leads people to exhibit these forms of cooperation? (Traum and Allen, 1994) have challenged intention-based approaches to dialog modeling ((Cohen and Levesque, 1990), (Lambert and Carberry, 1991), (Airenti et al., 1993)) arguing that, in non-cooperative settings (i.e., when the participants do not have</Paragraph>
  </Section>
class="xml-element"></Paper>
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