HCAIJul 26, 2024

Engaging with Children's Artwork in Mixed Visual-Ability Families

UW
arXiv:2407.18874v214 citationsh-index: 50
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses accessibility and family bonding for mixed visual-ability families, but is incremental in exploring technology's role.

The paper tackled the problem of how blind or low-vision family members engage with their sighted children's artwork, finding that they value it for bonding and prefer child storytelling over AI descriptions, though AI can facilitate dialogue despite inaccuracies.

We present two studies exploring how blind or low-vision (BLV) family members engage with their sighted children's artwork, strategies to support understanding and interpretation, and the potential role of technology, such as AI, therein. Our first study involved 14 BLV individuals, and the second included five groups of BLV individuals with their children. Through semi-structured interviews with AI descriptions of children's artwork and multi-sensory design probes, we found that BLV family members value artwork engagement as a bonding opportunity, preferring the child's storytelling and interpretation over other nonvisual representations. Additionally, despite some inaccuracies, BLV family members felt that AI-generated descriptions could facilitate dialogue with their children and aid self-guided art discovery. We close with specific design considerations for supporting artwork engagement in mixed visual-ability families, including enabling artwork access through various methods, supporting children's corrections of AI output, and distinctions in context vs. content and interpretation vs. description of children's artwork.

Foundations

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

Your Notes