OVERVIEW
Virtual Assistants
Kore.ai Platform
Key Concepts
Natural Language Processing (NLP)
Accessing Platform
VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
Virtual Assistant Builder
Virtual Assistant Types
Getting Started
Creating a Simple Bot
SKILLS
Storyboard
Dialog Task
Introduction
Dialog Builder (New)
Dialog Builder (Legacy)
User Intent Node
Dialog Node
Entity Node
Supported Entity Types
Composite Entities
Supported Colors
Supported Company Names
Form Node
Logic Node
Message Nodes
Confirmation Nodes
Bot Action Node
Service Node
Custom Authentication
2-way SSL for Service nodes
Script Node
Agent Transfer Node
WebHook Node
Grouping Nodes
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Manage Dialogs
User Prompts
Knowledge Graph
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Generation
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Build
Alert Tasks
Introduction
Ignore Words and Field Memory
How to Schedule a Smart Alert
Small Talk
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Overview
Configuring Digital Views
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Overview
How to Configure Digital Forms
NATURAL LANGUAGE
Overview
Machine Learning
Introduction
Model Validation
Fundamental Meaning
Introduction
NLP Guidelines
Knowledge Graph
Traits
Introduction
How to Use Traits
Ranking and Resolver
Advanced NLP Configurations
INTELLIGENCE
Overview
Context Management
Overview
Session and Context Variables
Context Object
How to Manage Context Switching
Manage Interruptions
Dialog Management
Sub-Intents & Follow-up Intents
Amend Entity
Multi-Intent Detection
Sentiment Management
Tone Analysis
Sentiment Management
Event Based Bot Actions
Default Conversations
Default Standard Responses
TEST & DEBUG
Talk to Bot
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Conversation Testing
CHANNELS
PUBLISH
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Overview
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Overview
How to Create Custom Dashboard
Conversation Flows
NLP Metrics
ADVANCED TOPICS
Universal Bots
Overview
Defining
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Store
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Defining
koreUtil Libraries
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Widget SDK – Message Formatting and Templates
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Using the BotKit SDK
Installing
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BotKit SDK Tutorial – Agent Transfer
BotKit SDK Tutorial – Flight Search Sample Bot
Using an External NLP Engine
ADMINISTRATION
HOW TOs
Creating a Simple Bot
Creating a Banking Bot
Context Switching
Using Traits
Schedule a Smart Alert
Configure UI Forms
Add Form Data into Data Tables
Configuring Digital Views
Add Data to Data Tables
Update Data in Data Tables
Custom Dashboard
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Patterns for Intents & Entities
Build Knowledge Graph
Global Variables
Content Variables
Using Bot Functions
Configure Agent Transfer
Update Balance Task
Transfer Funds Task
RELEASE NOTES
  1. Home
  2. Docs
  3. Virtual Assistants
  4. Builder
  5. Dialog Task
  6. Supported Entity Types

Supported Entity Types

The Entity Type provides the NLP Interpreter with the expected type of data from a user utterance to enhance recognition and system performance.  The Kore.ai NLP interpreter extracts the entity from the user utterance. If the user does not enter a required entity, you can define a Bot Response node to prompt the user to provide the entity. For more information, refer to Working with the Bot Response Node.

You can also define entity rules to validate user input, refer here for details.

The following Entity Types are specified for an entity node.

Address Composite Person Name
Airport Date Percentage
Attachment Date Period Phone Number
Email Date Time Quantity
City Description String
Country List of Items (enumerated) Time
Company List of items (lookup) Time Zone
Color Location URL
Custom Number Zip Code
Currency

Address

Captures addresses written in the standard US and Germany address formats. For example, 200 E Main ST Pheonix AZ 85123 USA. The complete address is captured as a string: “200 E Main ST Pheonix AZ 85123 USA.”

"entities":
{
"AddressEntity": "200 E Main ST Pheonix AZ 85123 USA"
}

For other country addresses, the platform captures strings that end with a recognizable city or country name. For more details, refer to the City entity.

Airport

Captures airport details with the following inputs:

  • City name
  • Airport name
  • IATA code
  • ICAO
  • Abbreviations of US cities.

Airport details are returned as a JSON entity with the elements shown below:

"AirportEntity":
  {"IATA": "LHR",
   "AirportName": "London Heathrow Airport",
   "City": "London",
   "ICAO": "EGLL",
  }

We use https://github.com/opentraveldata/opentraveldata for all the airport details.

Input Description Examples
City
name
Identifies the airport name from the city name in the user utterance. If the city has multiple airports, shows the list of airports to choose from. Utterance: Flying to Los Angeles
Response: The airport you entered seems to be ambiguous. Tell me the option you would like to choose.
<Names of five airports in Los Angeles>
Airport name Identifies the airport name from full airport name or partial name with the prominent keyword. Utterance: Flying to Heathrow
Captured: London Heathrow Airport with the necessary details in the bot.
IATA Identifies airport names by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) codes. Utterance: Flying to LHR
Captured: Details of the London Heathrow Airport
ICAO Identifies International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) codes. Utterance: Flying to EGLL
Captured: Details of the London Heathrow Airport
Abbreviations of cities Identifies city abbreviations that are listed in www.geonames.org Utterance: Flying to LA
Response: The airport you entered seems to be ambiguous. Tell me the option you would like to choose.
<Names of five airports in LA>

Attachment (Image / File)

The user can attach a file, image, or email up to 25 MB.

"entities":
{
"AttachmentEntity": "send"
}

Note: Currently, the attachment entity is supported only for the following channels – Facebook, Twitter, Web/Mobile, and Slack.

City

The name of a city in an utterance such as What is the temperature in New York. The bot captures any city name with over 5000 population in the form of a string. We use www.geonames.org for all the city details.

Note: City names are not disambiguated currently but prioritized based on their population. So, if the user utterances consist of Portland, Portland OR ranks higher than Portland ME.
"entities":
{
"CityEntity": "New York"
}

Country

Captures the name of a Country from user utterance such as What is the capital of the United States of America.

Country details are returned as a JSON entity with the elements shown below:

"CountryEntity": {
      "alpha3": "USA",
      "alpha2": "US",
      "localName": "United States of America",
      "shortName": "United States",
      "numericalCode": 840
}

See here for a complete list of countries https://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/country_code_list.htm.

Element Description Examples
alpha3 The three-letter code of the country USA, GBR, or IND
alpha2 The two-letter code for the country US, GB, or IN
localName Name of the country United States of America, United Kingdom, or India
shortName Short name United States, United Kingdom, or India
numericalCode United Nations, used numerical code M49 for countries 840, 826, or 356

Company Name or Organization Name

Captures the name of a company from user utterances such as the Nearest branch for Amazon. The value for Company Name is returned (Amazon) as a string. See Supported Companies list.

The company name corpus includes language-specific names. Variations of a company’s name like stock name, registered name, etc. are all mapped to a common name, thus ensuring that, for example, Amazon, Amazon.com, Amazon Inc are all recognized as a single company.

Apart from the supported companies, the bot recognizes the words starting with a capital letter and followed by these suffixes as a company type: Inc, Incorporated, Corp, Corporation, Group, Ltd, Limited, Co, Company, LP, LLP, LLLP, LLC, PLLC.

 "entities":
{
"OrganizationEntity": "amazon"
}

Color

Captures the name of the color from a user utterance. For example, Set the status to Green. Returns a value for the Color as Green as a string. See Supported Colors list.

"entities":
{
"ColorEntity": "green"
}

Currency

Captures the amount and type of currency from the user utterance. For example, This handbag is priced at 200 dollars where 200 is the amount and USD is the currency.

This entity type recognizes:

  • Full currency names (Dollar, Rupees, Indian National Rupees, Dinar)
  • Currency symbols ($, S$, £)
  • Standard currency abbreviations (INR, USD)
  • Commonly used slang for currencies (Buck, Nickel, Dime, Quid, Loonie, Toonie, Benjamin, Jackson, Hamilton.)
Note: Currency names are not disambiguated based on your previous usage. So, if the user utterance consists of a dollar first time, USD might rank higher than SGD (Singapore Dollar) because of the popularity. But if the user explicitly mentions SGD, the bot continues to consider SGD for the dollar from there.
"CurrencyEntity":[
{
"code": "SGD",
"amount": 20
}

Custom

Define a regular expression to validate the user input in the Regex field displayed.

For example, enter: [a-zA-Z]{3}[-]\d{4}
to return a sample response as: {"regex":"NLP-1234"}

For more information, refer to Regex Expressions.

Composite

Composite entities are used to capture multiple entity values in one entity.

For example, consider the sales inquiries to car sales. Typical queries can be of the form: I am interested in the Tesla Model S 2018 model or What would a red Tesla 2010 model cost or Tell me about Tesla Model S.

As you can see, the bot typically needs to process a combination of details like Make, Model, Year, and Color to respond to those queries.

These scenarios are taken care of by the Composite Entity Type. Refer here to know more about Composite Entity Types.

Date

Captures a date mention from a user utterance. For example, Book a flight on the 10th of October returns the value for Date in ISO8601 date format is YYYY-MM-DD.

The bot recognizes all possible ways and formats of dates, like:

  • Formatted dates like YYYY-MM-DD, DD-MM-YYYY, DD-MM-YY, YYYY/MM/DD, DD/MM/YYYY, DD/MM/YY, YYYY.MM.DD, DD.MM.YYYY, DD.MM.YY.
  • All number dates like YMD and DMY for 20180518 and 09102013.
  • Formatted dates with space separators like YYYY MM DD. dd/mm yyyy, dd-mm, dd-mm-yyyy, dd-mm-yy, mm-dd, dd / mm / yyyy, dd . mm . yyyy, ddmm yyyy, mmdd.
  • Named months like yyyy/dd/monthNames or yyyy-dd-monthNames or dd.monthNames.yyyy 2018/28/Dec or 2018-28-Dec or 28.Dec.2018.
  • Absolute dates related to now like today, tomorrow, yesterday, tonight, this evening, this afternoon, day after tomorrow, the day before yesterday, yesterday morning, tomorrow night, tomorrow for 1 hour, 3 days ago, 24 hours ago, in 3 days, 2 months hence, this day next month last year, next June, June 26 of the year after next, in a week, 2 weeks ago, 22nd of this month, Next month this day, Next 25th, This month 30th, 27th of this month, 3rdmonth, 2nd of the month.
  • Named dates like Christmas Day, Christmas Eve, Memorial Day this year, Thanksgiving 2018, last Thanksgiving, week after Thanksgiving, Passover, a day before the new year, day after Christmas.
  • Relative dates from absolute like 2 more days from tomorrow, 3 days after July 4, 3 days from now, 5days from today, Need two more days, in 2 days.
  • Weekdays like Saturday, coming Monday, Sunday, Saturday, next weekend, First Saturday of the upcoming year, First Sunday of the upcoming month, first Saturday of next month, First Sunday of next year.
"entities":
{
"DateEntity": "1982-04-13"
}

Date Time

Captures a date grouping along with time in a user utterance.

For example, Book a flight on the 10 th of October at 6 pm, returns the value for Date Time in ISO8601 date format as YYYYY-MM-DDThh: mm: ss.sTZD.

The bot recognizes all possible ways and formats to express date and time.

"entities":
{
"DateEntity": "2017-10-10T18:00:00+05:30"
}

Date Period

Captures start date and end date from the user input. For example, Book the hotel for five days starting May 5. If the user input does not include one or both of the dates, the bot prompts the user to provide the necessary input.

Note: Unlike other entities, Date Period entities allow you to enter two sets of user and errors prompts:

  1. User and Error Prompt for From Date.
  2. User and Error Prompt for To Date.

The following table lists how the entity works in different scenarios:

Input Type Bot Behaviour
Does not include both From and To dates [For example, Book hotel]. Shows User Prompts for From Date to the user
Includes either From or To date [For example, Book a hotel from 15th Aug] Shows User Prompts for From Date or User Prompts for To Date based on which is missing from the input
Includes implicit reference to From Date and duration [For example, Book a hotel for five days starting from Tuesday] Determines both dates
Includes From Date and duration [For example, Book a hotel for five days from 15th Nov] Determines both dates
Includes From Date and To Date [For example, Book a hotel from 5th to 10th] Determines both dates

Description

Captures statements or paragraphs of text from the user utterance. The value for Description is returned as a string and can include wild characters.

Note: Multi-Item is not available for this entity type.
"entities":
{
"Description": "text here"
}

Email

Captures email address from the utterance. For example, “Send an email to help@koremessenger.com” returns the value of Email as a string.

"entities":
{
"Email": "help@koremessenger.com"
}

List of Items (enumerated)

Display a list of values to the end-user. To define the list type,

  1. Click the Settings icon next to the List of items (enumerated) Type field.
  2. On the List of items (enumerated) Setup page, define one of the following list types.
    • Static List
    • List from Context

This feature is not fully supported in all languages Click here for details.

  • Static List – Enter the Display Name, Value, and Synonyms for the key. Set up Auto-Correction value for the user inputs.
  • List from Context – Define a context variable to use for this item in the following fields:
    • Specify Context Variable to Use – Defines the context object type. For example, EnterpriseContext, BotContext, UserContexts, or session variables such as context.entities. Entercontext.; select a context object type.
    • Display Name Key – The name displayed to the end-user.
    • Value Key – The key that represents the value of the item in the list.
    • Synonyms Key – Enter one or more synonyms for the key (Click here for details).
  • Auto-Correction– Set up auto-correct thresholds for the LOV entity type so that it not only accepts exact matches but also closest utterances with small variations. For example, let us consider that a list value called Apple for which a typo such as appel is accepted based on your threshold settings. The Auto-Correction setting works in the following way:
    1. The bot identifies the number of letters to be changed (inserts, deletes, or replaces) in user input to match it to a value in the list.
    2. The number is converted to a percentage of the total number of letters in the input.
    3. The list value with the highest similarity is considered as input if the score is greater than or equal to the configured percentage.
    Spell correction does not apply to dictionary words or alphanumeric inputs.

Post v7.1, the following keys are added to the context object for the below-mentioned usage:

  • ambiguousEntityValues: This key contains values when the user input for a multi-item entity is ambiguous. Using this, you can check if any ambiguous values were identified and construct the flow to resolve the ambiguity. This key is reset if the entity is re-prompted during the dialog. The values are an array of JSON objects, each object containing title, value, and synonym.
  • synonymsUsed: This key holds the synonym used to identify the item. You can use this value to personalize the bot response accordingly if needed. This key is reset if the entity is re-prompted during the dialog.

For the list to be presented to the user, you need to set the Display List of Values to Yes. This presents the list of values to the user in the channel-specific format, you want to use a template as per your requirement (Click here for more).

List of items (lookup)

Display a list of values to the end-user. To define the lookup list,

  1. Click the Settings icon next to the List of items (lookup) Type field.
  2. On the List of items (lookup) Setup page, define one of the following list types.
    • Static List
    • Remote List

This feature is not fully supported in all languages. Click here for details.

Static List: Use Static List to define the entity values as one of the following list types:

  • JSON tab – Enter a list of key/value pairs and synonyms (Click here for more). For example:
    [{
    "title": "United States",
    "value": "US",
    "synonyms": ["united states", "USA", "US", "U.S.A", "America"]
    },
    {
    "title": "John F. Kennedy International Airport",
    "value": "JFK",
    "synonyms": ["John F. Kennedy International Airport", "New York International Airport", "JFK"]
    }
    ]
  • Editor tab – Enter the Display Name, Value, and Synonyms for the key.
  • Upload File – Click Upload File to locate a JSON formatted file list or a .csv file formatted list of key/value pairs. For example,
    CSV File Format

Post v7.1, the following keys are added to the context object for the below-mentioned usage:

  • ambiguousEntityValues: This key contains values when the user input for a multi-item entity is ambiguous. Using this, you can check if any ambiguous values were identified and construct the flow to resolve the ambiguity. This key is reset if the entity is re-prompted during the dialog. The values are an array of JSON objects, each object containing title, value, and synonym.
  • synonymsUsed: This key holds the synonym used to identify the item. You can use this value to personalize the bot response accordingly if needed. This key is reset if the entity is re-prompted during the dialog.

For the list to be presented to the user, you need to set the Display List of Values to Yes. This presents the list of values to the user in the channel-specific format, you want to use a template as per your requirement (Click here for more).

Remote List

Remote List is used when the entity extraction needs to be done by an external service due to security restrictions or any other reasons. This can also be used to handle large data.

The steps involved are as follows:

  1. Define the Service Call: You can set up a service call similar to how a service node is currently set up. You can set headers, body (for POST), etc,. (Click here for more).
    The external service invoked must have a provision to accept and handle the user utterance data that the platform populates. The context.inputData object with the following fields is used for that purpose:

    • input – An array containing the list of inputs received from the user for the current dialog.
    • usedUp – Index form of words that are already used for other entities or intents. The format is x-y-z where
      • x represents the sentence/utterance index (0 till n).
      • y represents the start index of the used up word within the x utterance.
      • z represents the end index of the used up word.
      • sentenceindex-x-x represents no used up words in that sentence.
      • If multiple words are used-up in a single sentence, these should be entered as comma-separated values.
    • isMultiItem – Flag should be set if multiple values are expected from the service call.
        "inputData": {
          "input": [
            "get account"
          ],
          "usedUp": [
            "0-x-x"
          ],
          "isMultiItem": false
        }
  2. Map Response: You can map a response from the service call with the following fields:
    • The context variable that holds the response data from the service call. This must be in an array format.
    • Display Key Name – Name used to refer to this field; this name is used when interacting with the user. For example, in a disambiguation scenario. This can be accessed using {{context.entities.<entity-name>.title}}.
    • Value Key – The field name in the response body from the service call that holds the value, the entity is assigned this value. This can be accessed using {{context.entities.<entity-name>.value}}.
    • Synonyms Key – The field containing the synonyms for this field, if any. This is the value that the user refers to. For example, in response to the disambiguation question. This can be accessed using {{context.entities.<entity-name>.synonym}}.
    • Matched Word Index – To indicate the words in the inputData that were used for entity extraction (in the same format as the usedUp value in the context.inputData object). This is used by the platform to mark the word as used in the user utterance.

Flow: The platform will:

  1. Populate the context.inputData with the values mentioned above.
  2. Make the service call to fetch the entity values passing the values as configured in the service call.
  3. Use the values returned as per Response Mapping:
    • If a single value is returned by the remote system, then that value is assigned to the entity.
    • If multiple values are returned by the remote system, the platform extracts the entity from this list.
      • If a match is found, it is assigned to the entity.
      • If no match is found, the user is presented with a list of values to choose from. If the user input matches with any of the items in the list, then it is assigned to the entity. If the user input does not match any of the items, then the input is updated in the context object and another call to the remote service is initiated.
      • If one or more matches are found, then it is considered ambiguous and the user is presented with the choices.  If the user input matches with any of the items in the list, then it is assigned to the entity. If the user input does not match any of the items, then the input is updated in the context object and another call to the remote service is initiated.
    • If the entity is marked as a multi-item entity, then the list of values returned from the remote server is re-evaluated and all valid (valid as per entity type) list items are assigned as values for the entity. Invalid list items are discarded.
  4. Handle the following exceptions:
    • In case the response from the service call is empty or not in the expected format, the User Prompt settings for the entity are used to prompt the user for input.
    • In case of ambiguity, for example, when the service returns multiple values when one is expected, the user is prompted to choose one from the list of values returned by the service.

Location

Captures the location details of a city or state from a user utterance.

For example, in Bellagio, Las Vegas the entity captures the location details of Las Vegas. The entity returns the location of the object with address and coordinates as a JSON response.

"Location":
{
"formatted_address": "Las Vegas, NV, USA",
"lat": 36.1699412,
"lng": -115.1398296
}

Number

Captures a number from a user utterance. For example, Book a room for 16 people. In this example, the value 16 is returned as the number.

The Bots platform recognizes the spelled-out numbers and also standard abbreviations such as 1M. A consecutive number of words are combined into one number. For example, one two three becomes 123.

Note: The maximum number of digits allowed is 18.

"entities":
{
"NumberEntity": 16
}

Person Name

Captures the full name of a person from a user utterance.

For example, Send an email to John Smith, where John Smith is identified as Person Name.

Kore.ai Bot platform assumes that the first word in the user utterance with capital letters as the first name along and the next two words in camel case as a part of the name.

For example, if the user utterance is I want to talk to John Smith, it recognizes John Smith as the name. If the utterance is I want to talk to John smith immediately it recognizes only John as the name.

"entities":
{
"PersonName": "John Smith"
}

Percentage

Captures the percentage value from a user utterance.

For example, The chance of rain today is more than 60 percent, where 60 is the percentage and is returned as a float value of 0.6 in a range of (0.0-1.0). It supports the percent, percentage, and the % sign.

"entities":
{
"PercentageEntity": 0.6
}

Phone Number

Captures standard 10-digit or 12-digit telephone numbers.

For example, Please call 4075551212, the value for the Phone Number is 4075551212 and is returned as a number.

"entities":
{
"PhoneNumber": "+4075551212"
}

Quantity

Captures the quantity in an utterance with the following details from the user utterance:

  • Type of quantity (length, area, volume, etc.).
  • Unit of measurement (kilometers, square kilometer, cubic meter, etc.).
  • The amount (100, 500, 1.5, etc.).

When you select the Quantity entity type, you also need to select a unit type for the quantity and the default measure.

For example, for capturing volumes, select Volume as the Unity Type and Milliliters as the Default Unit. So, if a user utterance is Add 500 ml of water, the following JSON is returned:

"Quantity":
{
"unit": "millilitre",
"amount": 500,
"type": "volume",
"source": "500 ml"
}

Bots platform identifies all these quantities and unites along with the standard abbreviations, codes, and symbols.

Type Units
Length
  • kilometer
  • meter
  • centimeter
  • inch
  • foot
  • yard
  • mile
Area
  • square kilometer
  • square meter
  • square mile
  • square yard
  • square foot
Volume
  • cubic meter
  • liter
  • milliliter
  • gallon
  • ounce
Time
  • hour
  • minute
  • second
  • millisecond
Speed
  • meters per second
  • kilometers per hour
  • miles per hour
Pressure
  • pascal
  • atmosphere
  • bar
Energy
  • calorie
  • kilocalorie
  • watt-hour
  • kilowatt-hour
Memory
  • bit
  • byte
  • kilobyte
  • megabyte
  • terabyte
  • gigabyte
Weight
  • ton
  • kilogram
  • gram
  • pound
  • ounce
Angle
  • degree
Age
  • day
  • week
  • month
  • year
  • decade
  • century
Temperature
  • celsius
  • fahrenheit

String

Works identical to the Description entity type but limited to one sentence.

There won’t be any validations done on the user utterance for string entities unless trained. Hence this entity type is used as a last resort when your requirement is not met with any of the platform supported entity types.

Time

Capture time in a user utterance. For example, Set my alarm for 6 am, return the value of Time in ISO 8601 time format as hh:mm:ss.sZD.
It recognizes the following denotations:

    • am, a.m., AM, pm, p.m., PM, P.M.
    • Numbers spelled out. For example, Six AM.
    • Morning and evening. For example, Six in the evening.
"entities":
{
"TimeEntity": "T06:00:00+05:30"
}

Time Zone

A time zone. Eastern Standard Time converts the timezone into GMT and stores the resulting value. For example, if you type EST, it is stored as -6:00. Bots platform recognizes the standard time zones.

"entities":
{
"TimeZoneEntity": "-06:00"
}

URL

Captures a web URL from the utterance. The bot recognizes all standard formats of URLs. For example, Visit our website: www.kore.ai. The value for the URL is returned as a string.

"entities":
{
"URLEntity": "www.kore.ai"
}

Zip Code

Captures a US zip code from the user utterance. For example, What is the weather for 32746? The value for Zip Code is 32746 and is returned as a string.

"entities":
{
"ZipcodeEntity": "32746"
}
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