HCCLNov 27, 2019

A concrete example of inclusive design: deaf-oriented accessibility

arXiv:1911.13207v14 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work tackles the problem of digital exclusion for deaf individuals, offering a domain-specific solution that is incremental in nature.

The paper addresses the underrepresentation of deaf people in digital accessibility by proposing a comprehensive framework to improve their inclusion, including design, implementation, and evaluation of an initial prototype.

One of the continuing challenges of Human Computer Interaction research is the full inclusion of people with special needs into the digital world. In particular, this crucial category includes people that experiences some kind of limitation in exploiting traditional information communication channels. One immediately thinks about blind people, and several researches aim at addressing their needs. On the contrary, limitations suffered by deaf people are often underestimated. This often the result of a kind of ignorance or misunderstanding of the real nature of their communication difficulties. This chapter aims at both increasing the awareness of deaf problems in the digital world, and at proposing the project of a comprehensive solution for their better inclusion. As for the former goal, we will provide a bird's-eye presentation of history and evolution of understanding of deafness issues, and of strategies to address them. As for the latter, we will present the design, implementation and evaluation of the first nucleus of a comprehensive digital framework to facilitate the access of deaf people into the digital world.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes