Accepted Papers
- Reham Abuatiq (University of Washington): Exploring the Needs of Middle Eastern Young Adults with Intellectual Disabilities during Healthcare Transitioning to Adult Rehabilitation Services in Washington State
- Rahaf Alharbi (University of Michigan): Disability, Assistive Technologies and the ‘Special’ Needs of Children
- Sven Bittenbinder (University of Siegen): Responsibilities for accessibility in companies - Who does it?
- Anat Caspi (University of Washington): A11Y Futures Impacted by lack of adequate measurement
- Kimberly Fernandes (University of Pennsylvania): The Body, Spread Out Into a Database and Disability, Assistive Technologies and the ‘Special’ Needs of Children
- Raman Gayatri (Indiana University): Potential Barriers to Accessibility in Text-to-Image Generative AI
- Hira Jamshed (University of Michigan): A critical need for practical frameworks to help approaches like ‘ability-based design’ translate into accessible products
- Niloofar Kalantari (George Mason University): From Participant to Advocate: A Longitudinal User Study with Neurodiverse Adults.
- Vaishnav Kameswaram (University of Michigan): AI for Accessibility: An Agenda for the Global South
- Anukriti Kumar (University of Washington): Making Documents and Digital Content Accessible for People with Vision Impairments
- Shruti Mahajan, Khulood Alkhudaidi and Erin Solovey (Worcester Polytechnic Institute): Role of Technology in Increasing Representation of Deaf Individuals in Future STEM Workplaces
- Nora McDonald (University of Cincinnati): AI-Enhanced Adaptive Assistive Technologies: Methods for AI Design Justice
- Sanika Moharana (Carnegie Mellon University): Envisioning More Accessible Mediums of Designing Accessible Technology
- Tamanna Motahar (University of Utah): Building “Design Empathy” among HCI Students for People with Disabilities
- Frauke Mörike and Jana-Sophie Effert (TU Dortmund University): Focusing on inclusive sociotechnical work systems in dynamically changing workplace configurations – an interdisciplinary perspective
- Peya Mowar (Microsoft Research, India): Towards Optimizing OCR for Accessibility
- Roshni Poddar (Microsoft Research, India): Thoughts and Reflections on Conducting Research in Accessibility in the Global South
- Beatrice Vincenzi (KTH): Designing with the Body AI Assistive Technology with Sighted Guiding Companions
Submission Timeline and Process
Submissions have a very loose structure and allow previously published formal and informal writing or videos.
Please send your submissions to jmankoff@acm.org before the end of your day on September 28th, 2023.
Please tell us about any accessibility needs at the same time.
We will distribute these submissions to participants, and post them (with permission) on this website.
Default and Possible Accommodations
We plan to support hybrid participation in the workshop, as well as asynchronous participation (see our Schedule for more details).
Other accessibility defaults
- We will project autocaptions in person and enable them online
- We will request funding from ASSETS for CART/ASL participation if needed. We do not yet have confirmation about whether this will be supported. Please reach out to us when you submit if you need this.
- We have tried to schedule events at timezone-inclusive times
- We would like to hear from you about any other needs. Contact jmankoff@acm.org