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.
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Papers Found
117
Introducing People with ASD to Crowd Work
Kotaro Hara, Jeffrey P. Bigham
2017
ASSETS
General
Framework
Disability
Autism
Contribution
Artifact
Temporal
Asychronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Crowd Work, Working/Livelihood
Evaluation
Technical, Usage
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
Ability Channel
Technology
Scale
n-1
PwD->NonDisabled
Collaborator
Investigating the Accessibility of Crowdwork Tasks on Mechanical Turk
Stephen Uzor, Jason T. Jacques, John J Dudley, Per Ola Kristensson
2021
CHI
General
Framework
Disability
Unspecified/Multiple
Contribution
Empirical
Temporal
Asychronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Crowd Work, Working/Livelihood
Evaluation
N/A
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
N/A
Technology
Scale
n-1
PwD->NonDisabled
Collaborator
Investigating the use of circles in social networks to support independence of individuals with autism
Hwajung Hong, Svetlana Yarosh, Jennifer G. Kim, Gregory D. Abowd, Rosa I. Arriaga
2013
CHI
General
Framework
Disability
Autism
Contribution
Empirical
Temporal
Asychronous, Synchronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Social
Evaluation
N/A
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
N/A
Technology
Scale
1-n
NonDisabled->PwD
Collaborator