"Because we are no longer ashamed of our disabilities, we are proud": Advocating and Reclaiming Next-Gen Accessibility Symbols
Karen Joy, Chris Dodge, Harsh Chavda, Alyssa Sheehan
TLDR
This study explores how next-gen accessibility symbols, integrated with technology, can empower disability disclosure through user control and context.
Key contributions
- Examines awareness, use, and barriers of current accessibility symbols in disability disclosure.
- Proposes integrating symbols into wearables, mobile interfaces, and portable tools for disclosure.
- Highlights the need for user control over symbol visibility and optional explanations to reduce misinterpretation.
- Reconceptualizes symbol-based assistance as a dynamic disclosure system, dependent on context and carrier.
Why it matters
This paper is crucial for designing inclusive accessibility supports that empower individuals with disabilities. By focusing on user control and context-sensitive disclosure, it helps reduce misinterpretation and fosters agency in personal disclosure moments.
Original Abstract
Our study investigates the relationship between accessibility symbols and emerging technologies in supporting disability disclosure. We conducted twenty three remote design creation sessions with semi structured interviews to examine participants awareness of existing symbols, how they use symbols across online and offline contexts, and barriers to adoption and interpretation. Through participant sketching and future oriented storyboard probes, participants proposed ways to integrate symbols into wearable devices, mobile interfaces, and portable tools, emphasizing customizable and context sensitive disclosure. Our findings suggest symbols are most effective when paired with technologies that provide user control over visibility and optional pathways for explanation, helping reduce misinterpretation while supporting agency in disclosure moments. By reimagining symbol based assistance as part of a broader disclosure system where meaning depends on the symbol, its carrier, and context, this work informs more inclusive accessibility supports across diverse settings.
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