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
VizWiz: nearly real-time answers to visual questions
Jeffrey P. Bigham, Chandrika Jayant, Hanjie Ji, Greg Little, Andrew Miller, Robert C. Miller, Robin Miller, Aubrey Tatarowicz, Brandyn White, Samual White, Tom Yeh
2010
USIT
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Artifact
Temporal
Synchronous
Physical
Distributed
Context
Accessibility, Crowd Work
Evaluation
Technical, Usage
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
Ability Channel
Technology
Scale
n-1
NonDisabled->PwD
Collaborator
We Can Go Anywhere': Understanding Independence through a Case Study of Ride-Hailing Use by People with Visual Impairments in Metropolitan India
Kameswaran V,Gupta J,Pal J,O'Modhrain S,Veinot TC,Brewer R,Parameshwar A,Y V,O'Neill J
2018
PACM HCI
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Empirical
Temporal
Synchronous
Physical
Co-located
Context
Daily Life
Evaluation
N/A
Ability-sharing
Collaboration
N/A
Technology
Scale
1-1
NonDisabled->PwD
Collaborator
Weaving by Touch: A Case Analysis of Accessible Making
Das M,Borgos-Rodriguez K,Piper AM
2020
CHI
General
Framework
Disability
Blind and/or Low Vision
Contribution
Empirical
Temporal
Synchronous
Physical
Co-located
Context
Creativity
Evaluation
N/A
Ability-combining
Collaboration
N/A
Technology
Scale
1-1
PwD-NonDisabled
Collaborator