top of page

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

Mixed Local and Remote Participation in Teleconferences from a Deaf and Hard of Hearing Perspective

Vogler C,Tucker P,Williams N

2013

ASSETS

General

Framework

Disability

d/Deaf or hard of hearing (DHH)

Contribution

Empirical

Temporal

Synchronous

Physical

Co-located, Distributed

Context

Daily Life, Working/Livelihood

Evaluation

N/A

Ability-combining

Collaboration

N/A

Technology

Scale

Group

PwD-NonDisabled

Collaborator

Multimodal collaborative handwriting training for visually-impaired people

Beryl Plimmer, Andrew Crossan, Stephen A. Brewster, Rachel Blagojevic

2008

CHI

General

Framework

Disability

Blind and/or Low Vision

Contribution

Artifact

Temporal

Synchronous

Physical

Co-located

Context

Learning

Evaluation

Usage

Ability-sharing

Collaboration

Ability Channel

Technology

Scale

1-1

NonDisabled->PwD

Collaborator

Negotiating Privacy Boundaries in Social Applications for Accessibility Mapping

Holone H,Herstad J

2010

NordiCHI

General

Framework

Disability

Motor/physical impairment

Contribution

Artifact

Temporal

Synchronous

Physical

Distributed

Context

Accessibility, Crowd Work

Evaluation

Demonstration, Usage

Ability-sharing

Collaboration

Ability Channel

Technology

Scale

n-1

PwD->PwD

Collaborator

bottom of page