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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. 

Framework for ability sharing and ability combining

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

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