Experiencing Access with Interactive Technologies

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101117519
EC Contribution
€14,999
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2024
Summary

How is access experienced in interaction with modern technologies? Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has a tradition of asking questions around functionality in the context of assistive and accessible technologies. However, the additional aspects of lived experiences with disabilities are often secondary to the questions and interests driven by non-disabled researchers. This approach risks producing artefacts that might be functionally accessible, but are deemed as undesirable, unwanted or even harmful by disabled communities themselves. With an increased move towards digitising aspects of our everyday lives, there is an urgent need to understand the fundamentals of how access can be conceptualised, implemented and flexible to situated engagements. ACCESSTECH investigates the deeper theories behind access as a component affecting interaction with technologies for disabled people through Participatory Research through Design. Drawing on the PI's outstanding track record in critical analysis and participatory design practices within HCI (including 14 award-winning papers), we approach experiences of access along four paths of inquiry: 1) We identify the needed research and design parameters enabling us to produce knowledges about access-enabling technologies. 2) We establish which methods are required to design and develop critical technologies that are rooted in disability cultures as well as accepted and desired by disabled people. 3) We explore a range of different technologies to understand how they afford different kinds of access experiences. 4) We conceptualise and articulate access experiences as a distinct aspect shaping the interactive characteristics of modern technologies on a theoretical level. Each of these paths informs disability centred practices and theories in HCI, though, collectively, ACCESSTECH represents a fundamental paradigm shift in the ways we encounter disabilities and technologies.

Consortium (1)

Project Results (14)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (14)
A Critical Review of Sexuality, Technology and Disability
Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Dilisha Patel, Ekat Osipova, Katta Spiel, Giulia Barbareschi
Configuring Participatory Research as Give and Take Relationships: Methodological Reflections on Co-Designing Booklets with a Men Shed
Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Janis Lena Meissner
Evil Autistic Master Plan For Academia: HCI Edition
Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Kay Kender; Ekat Osipova
Finding Our Joy: Queer Perspectives on HCI Research
Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Molly O'Reilly-Kime; Yifan Feng; Francesca Cipelli; Ekat Osipova; Kay Kender; Madeleine Steeds; Sarah Clinch; Elisa Rubegni; Jennifer Rode
Found Footage from the Nuclear Protection National Parks
Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Kay Kender; Ekat Osipova
From Participation to Solidarity: A Case Study on Access of Maker Spaces from Deaf and Hearing Perspectives
Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Oliver Suchanek; Janis Lena Meissner; Robin Angelini; Katta Spiel
Making Trouble: Techniques for Queering Data and AI Systems
Designing Interactive Systems Conference· 2025DOI
Anh-Ton Tran, Annabel Rothschild, Kay Kender, Ekat Osipova, Brian Kinnee, Jordan Taylor, Louie Søs Meyer, Oliver L. Haimson, Ann Light, Carl Disalvo
Sexy and We Know It: Exploring Sexistemologies for HCI
Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Ekat Osipova; Kay Kender; Katta Spiel
Social Media as Marginalisation Machine: The Trans Desire for Solidarity Spaces
Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Kay Kender; Katta Spiel
Speculating Deaf Tech: Reimagining Technologies Centering Deaf People
Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems· 2025DOI
Robin Angelini; Katta Spiel; Maartje De Meulder
Can't Touch This? Is This Touch? It's So Fluffy I'm Gonna Die! -- Material and Tangible Research Methods in HCI
· 2024DOI
Burtscher, Sabrina; Kender, Kay; Meissner, Janis; Posch, Irene; Strohmayer, Angelika
Cyber toy stories: The broken promises and broken parts of interactive sex toys
Sexualities· 2024DOI
Ekat Osipova, Azadeh Badieijaryani, Katta Spiel
Experiencing Deaf Tech: A Deep Dive into the Concept of DeafWatch
The 26th International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility· 2024DOI
Robin Angelini, Katta Spiel, Maartje De Meulder
From Participation to Solidarity: A Case Study on Access of Maker Spaces from Deaf and Hearing Perspectives: Von Partizipation zu Solidarität: Eine Fallstudie zur Zugänglichkeit von Makerspaces aus Gehörloser und Hörender Perspektive
Proceedings of Mensch und Computer 2024· 2024DOI
Oliver Suchanek, Janis Lena Meissner, Robin Angelini, Katta Spiel