Ability-Diverse Collaboration
in HCI Research
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) must evolve to be ability-centric in an era celebrating diversity. Interdependence Theory underscores the need for technology to foster shared goals, irrespective of users' abilities. Our contribution includes a unified taxonomy, the Ability-Diverse Collaboration Framework, mapping the design space, and highlighting future research opportunities.
.png)
Papers Found
117
Cross-Modal Collaborative Information Seeking (CCIS): An Exploratory Study
Al-Thani D,Stockman T,Tombros A
2013
BCS-HCI
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Empirical
Temporal
Synchronous
Physical
Co-located, Distributed
Context
Productivity
Evaluation
N/A
Ability-combining
Collaboration
N/A
Technology
Scale
1-1
PwD-NonDisabled
Collaborator
Crowdsourcing Subjective Fashion Advice Using VizWiz: Challenges and Opportunities
Burton MA,Brady E,Brewer R,Neylan C,Bigham JP,Hurst A
2012
ASSETS
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Artifact, Empirical
Temporal
Asychronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Crowd Work, Daily Life
Evaluation
Usage
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
Ability Channel
Technology
Scale
n-1
NonDisabled->PwD
Collaborator
Design and Evaluation of Accessible Collaborative Writing Techniques for People with Vision Impairments
Das M,Piper AM,Gergle D
2022
TOCHI
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Artifact, Empirical
Temporal
Synchronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Productivity
Evaluation
Technical, Usage
Ability-combining
Collaboration
Communication Supporter
Technology
Scale
Group
PwD-NonDisabled
Collaborator