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
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