JOURNAL ARTICLE

Usability Issues in Spoken Language Dialogue Systems

Laila DybkjærNiels Ole Bernsen

Year: 2001 Journal:   Nihon Naibunpi Gakkai zasshi Vol: 68 (7)Pages: 676-87   Publisher: Japan Endocrine Society

Abstract

We report a case of PHP Type II whose phosphaturic response to PTH was restored by treatment for complicated Bartter's syndrome. A 34-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital in July 1990 because of tetanic convulsion. The physical examination showed normal blood pressure (118/62mmHg), round face without shortness of metacarpal bones and positive Trousseau's sign. Although renal function was normal, hypocalcemia (6.5mg/dl) and hyperphosphatemia (4.8mg/dl) in association with high levels of serum PTH (942pg/ml) and 1.25 (OH)2D3 (86pg/ml) were disclosed. Ellsworth-Howard test revealed that there was no increase in the urinary secretion of phosphate despite an increase in urinary cAMP excretion. On the other hand, hypopotassemia (2.5mEq/l) and metabolic alkalosis with high plasma renin activity (22.8ng/ml/hr) and aldosterone concentration (22.7ng/dl) were coexistent. Pressor response to angiotensin II infusion was blunted. Although no glomeruli were obtained by renal biopsy specimen, vacuolar degeneration on proximal tubules were noted. These findings indicated that she had PHP Type II associated with Bartter's syndrome. By administration of potassium (24mEq/day), spironolactone (50mg/day) and only small doses of 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 (0.5mg/day), serum levels of potassium as well as calcium were normalized and tetanic attacks disappeared. In March 1991, she was re-examined by Ellsworth-Howard test in order to clarify the effects of hypopotassemia on renal tubular response to PTH. Interestingly, phosphaturic response to PTH was restored, and the degree of increase in urinary cAMP excretion was 4 times as high as that on the first admission. These results suggest that hypopotassemia changes the response of renal proximal tubular cells to PTH, particularly such as reabsorption of phosphate and cAMP response, although it is possible that hypocalcemia may contribute to the blunted phosphaturic response to PTH. The mechanism of hypocalcemia seen in this case remains to be elucidated.

Keywords:
Usability Computer science Usability engineering Lagging Usability goals Heuristic evaluation Engineering Human–computer interaction

Metrics

34
Cited By
3.07
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
22
Refs
0.92
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Speech and dialogue systems
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Usability and User Interface Design
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Human-Computer Interaction
Digital Accessibility for Disabilities
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Human Factors and Ergonomics

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Usability issues in spoken dialogue systems

Laila DybkjærNiels Ole Bernsen

Journal:   Natural Language Engineering Year: 2000 Vol: 6 (3-4)Pages: 243-271
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Evaluation and usability of multimodal spoken language dialogue systems

Laila DybkjærNiels Ole BernsenWolfgang Minker

Journal:   Speech Communication Year: 2004 Vol: 43 (1-2)Pages: 33-54
BOOK-CHAPTER

Spoken Language Dialogue Systems

E. GiachinScott McGlashan

Text, speech and language technology Year: 1997 Pages: 69-117
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.