Actor Intents
Introduction
A person who performs in live or recorded performances such as movies, television, or on stage. These intents let users ask about actors.
This document provides a quick reference to the Actor
intents and corresponding slots. For details around how these intents are specified, see Understanding the Structure of the Built-in Intent Library.
Intent Signature
Use the intent signature as the intent
name in your intent schema. This example shows a schema with the Actor
intent:
{
"intents": [
{
"name": "AMAZON.SearchAction<object@Actor>"
}
]
}
For more about the components of this signature, see Understanding the Structure of the Built-in Intent Library.
To see the full JSON format for intents, see Interaction Model Schema. You can also use the developer console user interface to add the intents and then see the JSON code in the JSON Editor.
Actor
intents can be used in English (US) skills. They are not available for English (UK) or German skills.Actor Intents
The following table summarizes the available Actor
intents and the set of slots that may be included. For each intent, the sections below the table show:
- A sample utterance that would invoke the intent.
- The JSON you include in your intent schema if you want to use the intent.
-
An example of the
IntentRequest
sent to your skill for the provided sample utterance, illustrating the slots that may be included. For brevity, these samples leave out the full set of properties that are normally part of a completeIntentRequest
.Note that if your interaction model includes multiple intents with similar utterances, your results may vary from these examples.
For definitions of the slots used in these intents, see Actor Slots.
Intent Signature | Example Utterance | Possible Slots |
---|---|---|
AMAZON.SearchAction<object@Actor> |
"who is that actor" | object.type |
SearchAction<object@Actor>
User: who is that actor
Intent Schema:
{
"intents": [
{
"name": "AMAZON.SearchAction<object@Actor>"
}
]
}
Request:
{
"request": {
"type": "IntentRequest",
"locale": "en-US",
"intent": {
"name": "AMAZON.SearchAction<object@Actor>",
"slots": {
"object.type": {
"name": "object.type",
"value": "actor"
}
}
}
}
}
Actor Slots
The Actor
intents can return slot values to your skill. You do not include these slots in your intent schema – they are generated automatically from the intent signature.
The following table shows the slots the Actor
intents can return. For each slot, the table includes:
- The slot name.
- An example utterance for the slot.
- The JSON that would be sent to your skill for the sample utterance.
- If applicable, the name of the slot type used by the slot. You can see details about slot types in the Slot Type Reference.
Slot Name | Utterance | Slot Values |
---|---|---|
|
"…who are these actors" |
|
Built-in Intent Library Documentation
Actor
is used in the following built-in intent library category:
Navigate to all built-in intents in the Built-in Intent Library.
See all available slot types in the Slot Type Reference.
Learn more about using the built-in intent library:
- Understanding the Structure of the Built-in Intent Library
- Implementing the Built-in Intents
- Standard Built-in Intents
Learn more about building your voice interface:
- Choose the Invocation Name for a Custom Skill
- Create the Interaction Model for Your Skill
- Best Practices for Sample Utterances and Custom Slot Type Values
- Interaction Model Schema
- Alexa Design Guide
The built-in intent library incorporates material from Schema.org, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (version 3.0) (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. For questions, please contact us.
Last updated: Nov 28, 2023