Patent Abstract:
Systems and techniques for improved user prompting. A system according to one aspect of the invention includes a central server hosting various modules providing services to users. The modules suitably employ voice recognition in order to interpret user inputs. Each module has access to user information that includes information indicating the user&#39;s experience with each function of each module. When a module needs to issue a prompt to the user, it retrieves and examines the user information to determine the user&#39;s experience with the module and function. Suitably, each module is operative to categorize a user as belonging to an experience category, such as novice, intermediate and expert based on the user&#39;s level of experience with the function. The module selects a prompt associated with the user&#39;s level of experience with the function and presents it to the user.

Full Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates generally to improvements in automated voice response systems. More particularly, the invention relates to advantageous systems and techniques for providing menus and other assistance to a user of a voice response system. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Automated voice response systems, particularly systems employing speech recognition, must frequently provide guidance to a user so that the user may properly format his or her inputs and repeat inputs that were not properly recognized by the system. In order to achieve user satisfaction, voice response systems must provide prompts to users that indicate the format and content of the inputs needed from a user, so that the user&#39;s inputs can be interpreted accurately. In addition, presentation of prompts by the systems must not be too time consuming for a user. The nature of voice response systems makes them particularly prone to consume too much of a user&#39;s time because much of the information presented by a system, particularly menu information, is presented in sequence. The information a user needs to hear may be preceded by other information of no interest to the user. 
     One approach to providing user menus that are not excessively burdensome is the use of contextual menus. Contextual prompting provides prompts that are based on the user&#39;s position in the application. For example, if a user is listening to voicemail, one set of prompts is provided. If a user is searching a directory in order to place a call, another set of prompts is provided. Such directed selection of prompts helps reduce the number of choices presented to the user, but typical present day systems do not sufficiently advantageously distinguish between users. For example, expert users may know all the different inputs that are required for each stage of an application, other users may be very experienced with some portions of the application but not with other portions, and relatively inexperienced users are likely to be unfamiliar with the inputs required for a system and need fairly extensive information, such as a relatively complete list of available input choices. 
     In typical prior art systems, however, little or no distinction is made between such users. Instead, because of the necessity that all users be provided with enough information to enable them to provide a correctly formatted input that will achieve the result they desire, all users are typically treated in the same manner. More experienced users, therefore, are forced to listen to much more extensive prompts than they need. Systems that provide extensive prompts to all users waste time and cause significant dissatisfaction among users that do not require elaborate prompts. Conversely, if a system employs shorter prompts, it may run the risk that the prompts will be insufficiently detailed for less expert users. 
     There exists, therefore, a need for automated voice response systems that are capable of determining the experience level of a user for various stages of an application and for providing prompts that take into account the particular user&#39;s level of experience or ability to successfully work with the stage of the application being used. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     A system according to one aspect of the invention includes a central server hosting various modules providing services to users. The modules may suitably employ voice recognition in order to interpret user inputs. When a module needs an input from a user, it selects an appropriate prompt for presentation to the user. The module has access to user information that includes information indicating the user&#39;s experience with each function of each module. The module examines the user information to determine the user&#39;s experience with the module and function. Suitably, the module categorizes a user as belonging to an experience category, such as novice, intermediate or expert based on the user&#39;s level of experience with the function. The module selects a prompt associated with the user&#39;s level of experience with the function and presents it to the user. The use of context and experience information in selection of prompts is also discussed in “Methods and Apparatus for Context and Experience Sensitive Help in Voice Applications,” U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 10/772,483, assigned to a common assignee with the present invention and filed on even date herewith, and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. 
     A more complete understanding of the present invention, as well as further features and advantages of the invention, will be apparent from the following Detailed Description and the accompanying drawings. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         FIG. 1  illustrates a system employing user and context sensitive prompting according to an aspect of the present invention; and 
         FIG. 2  illustrates a process of voice response employing user and context sensitive prompting according to an aspect of the present invention. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
       FIG. 1  illustrates a system  100  employing user and context sensitive prompting according to an aspect of the present invention. For purposes of illustration, the system  100  is a central telephone system providing telephone services and related services, such as directory lookup, voice dialing and voice mail to users. It will be recognized, however, that a system such as the system  100  may suitably be implemented so as to provide any of a number of services. For example, a system may provide bank account information to customers or potential customers or may be used in a customer service center, allowing selection of prerecorded information for some problems and referring a customer to an appropriate agent for other problems. 
     The system  100  may suitably comprise a central server  102 , including a processor  104 , memory  106  and long term storage  108 . The server  102  hosts or has access to information and data storage facilities of interest to users, for example, directory information and voice mail storage. The directory information may suitably be stored in a directory information database  110 , hosted as a file on the long term storage  108 , and the voice mail storage may be allocated to storage space  112  on the long term storage  108 . It will be recognized that storage facilities such as the directory  110  and the storage space  112 , and data such as the data stored therein, need not be hosted on the server  102 , but may be hosted in any desired location or component. 
     The system  100  may suitably host a voice response application  114 , suitably implemented as software residing on the long term storage  108  and executed under the control of the processor  104 . The voice response application  114  includes a user interface module  118 A and a plurality of additional modules. As illustrated here, the additional modules are a directory module  118 B, a voice dial module  118 C and a voicemail access module  118 D. The modules  118 B,  118 C and  118 D are invoked by the user interface module  118 A as required, in response to a user&#39;s inputs. 
     Each user communicates with the server  102  by means of a telephone set such as the internal telephone sets  123 A . . .  123 N. Such telephone sets may be part of an internal office phone system or may be external sets that connect to the server  102  by dialing a central exchange  124  communicating with the server  102 . When a user makes an initial contact with the server  102 , for example, by placing a call to the central exchange  124  or by picking up a handset of an internal telephone, the user interface module  118 A provides an initial prompt to the user and receives user inputs. Depending on the user&#39;s response, the user interface module  118 A invokes the module  118 B,  118 C or  118 D, as appropriate. The module that has been invoked then issues prompts, receives user inputs and takes actions, such as placing a call or retrieving voice mail, in order to perform the service desired by the user. 
     The modules  118 A,  118 B,  118 C and  118 D include prompt selection modules  125 A,  125 B,  125 C and  125 D, in order to provide for selection of prompts appropriate for the operation being performed and for the experience level of the user. 
     The prompt selection modules  124 A,  124 B,  124 C and  124 D maintain awareness of the particular function for which prompting is required. During operation of each of the modules  118 A,  118 B,  118 C and  118 D, each module passes information to its prompt selection module indicating the active function. Each of the prompt selection modules  124 A,  124 B,  124 C and  124 D receives information indicating the active function, that is, the function with which the user is currently engaged. In addition, each of the prompt selection modules  124 A,  124 B,  124 C and  124 D is operative to receive proficiency information for the user, indicating the user&#39;s facility with the function being executed and with the use of the system  100  as a whole. The proficiency information may suitably be taken from a user information database  130 . Each of the prompt selection modules  124 A,  124 B,  124 C and  124 D uses the proficiency information to select or create an appropriate prompt to be provided to the user. Prompts may suitably be selected from a prompt repository  132 , according to a set of rules implemented by the currently operating one of the modules  124 A,  124 B,  124 C and  124 D. The prompts may suitably be stored in a prompt database  134  stored in the repository  132 . 
     Alternatively, the currently operating prompt selection module may create a prompt based on information stored in the database  134 , taking into consideration the module and function being employed, as well as proficiency information taken from the database  130 . 
     Suitably, the prompt delivered to the user is based on the user&#39;s proficiency, as indicated in a user record stored in the database  130 . Each user record may suitably include a function usage tally for each function, indicating the number of times the user has successfully performed the function. Prompts are suitably oriented toward novice, intermediate or expert users. Parameters or settings of the prompt selection modules  125 A,  125 B,  125 C and  125 D may suitably include criteria for distinguishing between novice, intermediate and expert users and may adapt prompts to the appropriate level of user based on the user&#39;s proficiency information. Alternatively, the prompts stored in the prompt repository  132  may suitably be organized according to module, function and function usage tally. When a prompt is to be selected, the currently operating prompt selection module receives or looks up module, function and function usage tally information, and the currently operating prompt selection module may use this information as an index for searching the database  134 . 
     For example, the database  134  may include a comprehensive explanatory prompt to be presented by the user interface module  118 A to a user with no experience using the system  100 . The prompt might be a comprehensive recitation of all the functions that were available, and might be associated with a function usage tally of 0 for all functions. The prompt selection module  125 A would simply search the database  134  for the prompt associated with the user interface module  118 A and also associated with a function usage tally of 0. 
     Each of the modules  118 A,  118 B,  118 C and  118 D has access to the user information database  130 . The user information database  130  includes a usage history for each user. In the embodiment discussed here, the usage history for a user includes a tally for each function, indicating the number of times the user has successfully employed the function. It will be recognized, however, that alternative techniques for describing a user&#39;s usage history are possible. For example, a proficiency score may be maintained, with the score taking into account information including the number of times the user has successfully employed the function as well as the number of errors made when using the function and the number of repetitions and prompts that have been required. 
     The usage history for a user is suitably organized by module. That is, the user&#39;s usage history for the functions carried out by the module  118 A are grouped together, the user&#39;s usage history for the functions carried out by the module  118 B are grouped together, and so on. This organization provides a simple and convenient way for a module to retrieve information relating to a user&#39;s likely needs for prompting for a particular function. For example, when the voicemail module  118 D is to issue a prompt relating to a function, the prompt selection module  125 D searches the user information database  130  to find a user entry for the user. The voicemail module  118 D searches the user entry for the function for which the prompt is to be issued. The prompt selection module  125 D obtains the user&#39;s usage tally for the function. The prompt selection module  125 D uses the usage tally as an index to search the prompts related to the function for which the prompt is to be issued, and to select the prompt associated with the user&#39;s usage tally value for the function. The prompt is then passed to the user interface module  118 A, which presents the prompt for the user, suitably by playing the prompt using a sound recorder or a voice synthesizer. 
     The prompts stored in the database  134  may suitably be organized by module, by functional area and by experience category. The database  134  includes a collection of prompts for each of the modules  118 A- 118 D. For example, the voice mail access module  118 D may include the functions “play messages,” “next message,” “delete message,” “repeat message” and “save message.” Depending on a user&#39;s facility with each function, different messages may be needed to assist the user in providing a correct voice input for a particular function. Thus, for example, the database  134  may include three prompts for each of the functions performed by the module  118 D. The prompts for each function may include a prompt directed to novice users, a prompt directed to intermediate users and a prompt directed to expert users. It will be recognized that while three experience categories are described, additional experience categories may be employed as desired. 
     One example of a prompt might be one directed toward an expert user of the “play messages” function of the “voicemail access” module. An expert user might need only a simple and short prompt, such as an indication of the function being employed. A suitable prompt for such circumstances might be “messages” and might be characterized and indexed as “voicemail access, play messages, expert user,” or by a suitable symbolic or numerical representation of such indexing. 
     An exemplary technique of organizing and indexing prompts, that may suitably be employed in constructing and searching the database  134 , is as follows. The prompts are grouped in the database  134  according to the module with which they are associated, and the search for a particular prompt is performed in the prompts associated with the module being used. Each module performs a number of different functions, and a number of experience levels may be associated with each function. For one embodiment, the prompts for each module are organized in the form of an array P(X, g(F x )), where
         P is the prompt to be played,   X indicates the function being performed, and   g(F x ) indicates the experience category associated with the prompt P, where F x  is the user&#39;s usage tally for the function X. The value of F x  is the number of times a user has successfully used the function X. For example, if the function under consideration is the function “repeat messages,” the value of F x  would be the number of times a user had successfully used that function.       

     The value of g(F x ) may suitably be an integer and may be assigned a value depending on the value of F x . If a user may have one of m different experience levels for the function X, the value of g(F x ) may suitably be defined as follows:
 
 g ( F   x )=1 if 0 ≦F   x   &lt;C   1  
 
 g ( F   x )=2 if  C   1   ≦F   x   &lt;C   2  
 
 g ( F   x )=3 if  C   2   ≦F   x   &lt;C   3  
 
 g ( F   x )= m  if  F   x   &gt;C   m−1 .
 
     The values of C 1 , C 2 , C 3 , and so on, are chosen based on an estimate of how many successful uses of a function puts a user into a particular experience category. For example, if a novice user is considered to be a user who has successfully used a function four times or less, the value of C 1  for that function may be set to 5. An intermediate user may be one who has used the function 5 to 24 times, in which case the value of C 2  is set to 25, and an advanced user may be one who has used the function 25 times or more. In this example, there would be only three categories, that is, novice, intermediate and expert, and values would be assigned only to C 1  and C 2 . 
     To take an example, suppose that a user, Mary, is using the system  100 . The user information database  130  includes a user entry for Mary. The entry includes function tallies for each function, with the function usage tally indicating the number of times the user has successfully used the function. The function tallies provide evidence that can be interpreted to indicate the user&#39;s proficiency for each of the functions performed by the voice dial module  118 C and the voicemail module  118 D, as well as with the overall system  100 , and is organized as follows: 
     
       
         
               
               
               
             
               
               
               
             
           
               
                   
               
               
                 Module 
                 Function 
                 Function usage tally 
               
               
                   
               
             
             
               
                   
               
             
          
           
               
                 Overall system 
                 Main menu accesses 
                 188 
               
               
                 Overall system 
                 Main menu commands 
                 202 
               
               
                 Voice dialing module 
                 Call menu accesses 
                 197 
               
               
                 Voice dialing module 
                 Call by contact 
                 98 
               
               
                 Voice dialing module 
                 Call by directory 
                 52 
               
               
                 Voice dialing module 
                 Call by number 
                 47 
               
               
                 Voicemail module 
                 Message menu accesses 
                 5 
               
               
                 Voicemail module 
                 Play message 
                 0 
               
               
                 Voicemail module 
                 Delete message 
                 0 
               
               
                   
               
             
          
         
       
     
     The tally for main menu accesses indicates the number of times Mary has employed the system  100 . Mary&#39;s user entry indicates a large number of successful uses of each function of the voice dial module  118 C, suggesting that she is an expert user of the voice dial module  118 C. Mary&#39;s user entry indicates only a few menu accesses of the voicemail module  118 D and no successful uses of the other functions of that module, suggesting that Mary is a novice user of the voicemail module  118 D. Therefore, the voice dial module  118 C will provide relatively brief prompts, and the voicemail module  118 D will provide more detailed prompts. 
     Suppose that Mary accesses the system  100  in order to place a call. Based on her expertise with the voice dialing module  118 C, the dialog between Mary and the system might proceed as follows: 
     System—“Call control menu.” 
     Mary—“Dial by directory.” 
     System—“Directory.” 
     Mary—“Derek Sanders.” 
     The prompts are relatively short, and have the advantage of consuming little time. Because Mary is an expert user, the prompts are sufficient to allow her the guidance she needs. If Mary were a less expert user, the following interaction might take place: 
     System—“Call control menu. What would you like to do?” 
     Mary—“Dial by directory.” 
     System—“Directory. Whom would you like to call?” 
     Mary—“Derek Sanders.” 
     Once Mary has finished the interaction, her user tallies for Main menu accesses, main menu commands and dial by directory are incremented in order to reflect her additional experience. 
     As noted above, Mary&#39;s function usage tally suggests that she is less expert with the voice mail module  118 D than with the voice dial module  118 C. Thus, a dialog with the voice dial module  118 D might proceed as follows: 
     System—“Main menu.” 
     Mary—“Go to messages.” 
     System—“Message menu. Here you can say “read my messages” or “help” for more options.” 
     Mary—“Read my messages.” 
     System—“&lt;Plays first message&gt;. Now you can say, “save message,” “delete message,” or “play next message.” At any time during a message, you can say “skip message” in order to go to the next message.” 
     In this case, the initial prompt is brief because Mary is an expert user with respect to the initial interaction, that is, with the user interface module  118 A. The prompts relating to the voicemail module  118 D are more detailed, because Mary is a novice user with respect to the voicemail module  118 D. 
       FIG. 2  illustrates the steps of a process  200  for voice response including user and context sensitive prompting according to an aspect of the present invention. At step  202 , in response to user commands and data inputs, navigation through various modules and functions is performed. At step  204 , when a prompt is to be presented to a user, function and user data is examined in order to provide information required to select an appropriate prompt for the user. The function and user data indicates the function for which prompting is required, and the user data indicates the user&#39;s level of experience with the function and with the voice response system as a whole. At step  206 , the user data is evaluated and the user is categorized by experience level, for example, novice, intermediate, or expert. At step  208 , a prompt matching the function and the user&#39;s experience category is retrieved from a previously assembled collection of prompts indexed by module, function and experience category. At step  210 , the prompt is presented to the user. At step  212 , upon receiving a user input, services are performed and data is entered in response to the input. The process then returns to step  202 . 
     While the present invention is disclosed in the context of a presently preferred embodiment, it will be recognized that a wide variety of implementations may be employed by persons of ordinary skill in the art consistent with the above discussion and the claims which follow below.

Technology Classification (CPC): 6