Dear All,
A kind reminder that the seminar by Prof. Jonathan Lazar on "Born-Accessible Design:
Methods, Tools, and Policies" is starting now at the Dept. of Computer Science of the
University of Milan in via Celoria 18, Milano (Council Room, 8th floor). It is also
streamed on Zoom
(
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81149147782?pwd=5BfqSTzTWxDDujCiVij2u6RoeeXW1D.1).
Link of the event:
https://di.unimi.it/it/seminario-born-accessible-design-methods-tools-and-p…
Title: Born-Accessible Design: Methods, Tools, and Policies
Abstract:
Digital technologies, applications, websites, and documents are often created without
considering accessibility for people with disabilities. Often, a technology is built
inaccessibly, and then either remediated for accessibility, remediated for accessibility
only when there is a complaint from a person with a disability, or is never remediated for
accessibility. Building inaccessible technologies or content and then remediating them for
accessibility after-the-fact is not an effective approach. The time delay between when
digital technologies and content are built and released and when they are made accessible
can itself be a form of societal discrimination, as some people have access to the
technologies and content while others do not until a later date. Furthermore, remediating
a technology after-the-fact tends to cost more than accessibility built-in from the start,
which unfortunately leads to the misperception that accessibility is expensive. While
disability rights advocates often call for digital technologies and content to be built
using a born-accessible approach, the research literature in HCI and UX does not define
the details for a born-accessible model. This presentation will report on work being done
by the Maryland Initiative for Digital Accessibility (MIDA) at the University of Maryland,
in collaboration with partners Adobe and the U.S. Access Board, to help define methods,
tools, and policies for the born-accessible design approach. The presentation will include
information on methods for involving disability rights groups into the born-accessible
design process, the shifting power dynamics that occur in born-accessible design, mockups
of interface features that support born-accessible design, and three examples where
born-accessible concepts have been incorporated into U.S. State and Federal policies.
Bio:
Jonathan Lazar, PhD, LLM is a professor in the College of Information at the University of
Maryland, where he is the executive director of the Maryland Initiative for Digital
Accessibility (MIDA), and is a faculty member in the Human- Computer Interaction Lab
(HCIL). Dr. Lazar has over 25 years of experience in research and teaching in
human-computer interaction, with a focus on technology accessibility for people with
disabilities, user-centered design methods, assistive technologies, and law and public
policy related to HCI. Dr. Lazar has authored or edited 17 books, including Research
Methods in Human-Computer Interaction (2nd edition, co- authored with Feng and
Hochheiser), Ensuring Digital Accessibility Through Process and Policy (co-authored with
Goldstein and Taylor), Foundations of Information Law (co-authored with Jaeger, Gorham,
and Greene-Taylor), and Accessible Technology and the Developing World (co-edited with
Stein). Dr. Lazar has published over 200 refereed articles in journals, conference
proceedings, edited books, and magazines, and has received research funding from the U.S.
National Science Foundation, the U.S. National Institute on Disability, Independent
Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), Google, and Adobe. At the University of
Maryland, he frequently teaches courses on Human-Computer Interaction, Accessibility,
User-Centered Design, and Legal Research Methods. He is the recipient of the 2020 ACM
SIGACCESS Award for Outstanding Contributions to Computing and Accessibility and the 2016
ACM SIGCHI Social Impact Award, is a member of the ACM SIGCHI Academy, and has served as
the general chair of the 2021 ACM ASSETS conference.
Best,
Dragan Ahmetovic<http://dragan.ahmetovic.it/>
Associate Professor
EveryWare Lab.<http://everywarelab.di.unimi.it/>
Dept. of Computer Science<http://www.di.unimi.it/>
Università degli Studi di Milano<https://www.unimi.it/>