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Main Authors: Wu, Keke, Quadri, Ghulam Jilani, Wang, Arran Zeyu, Osei-Tutu, David Kwame, Petersen, Emma, Koushik, Varsha, Szafir, Danielle Albers
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.16072
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author Wu, Keke
Quadri, Ghulam Jilani
Wang, Arran Zeyu
Osei-Tutu, David Kwame
Petersen, Emma
Koushik, Varsha
Szafir, Danielle Albers
author_facet Wu, Keke
Quadri, Ghulam Jilani
Wang, Arran Zeyu
Osei-Tutu, David Kwame
Petersen, Emma
Koushik, Varsha
Szafir, Danielle Albers
contents Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) have unique needs and challenges when working with data. While visualization aims to make data more accessible to a broad audience, our understanding of how to design cognitively accessible visualizations remains limited. In this study, we engaged 20 participants with IDD as co-designers to explore how they approach and visualize data. Our preliminary investigation paired four participants as data pen-pals in a six-week online asynchronous participatory design workshop. In response to the observed conceptual, technological, and emotional struggles with data, we subsequently organized a two-day in-person co-design workshop with 16 participants to further understand relevant visualization authoring and sensemaking strategies. Reflecting on how participants engaged with and represented data, we propose two strategies for cognitively accessible data visualizations: transforming numbers into narratives and blending data design with everyday aesthetics. Our findings emphasize the importance of involving individuals with IDD in the design process, demonstrating their capacity for data analysis and expression, and underscoring the need for a narrative and tangible approach to accessible data visualization.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2408_16072
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Our Stories, Our Data: Co-designing Visualizations with People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Wu, Keke
Quadri, Ghulam Jilani
Wang, Arran Zeyu
Osei-Tutu, David Kwame
Petersen, Emma
Koushik, Varsha
Szafir, Danielle Albers
Human-Computer Interaction
Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) have unique needs and challenges when working with data. While visualization aims to make data more accessible to a broad audience, our understanding of how to design cognitively accessible visualizations remains limited. In this study, we engaged 20 participants with IDD as co-designers to explore how they approach and visualize data. Our preliminary investigation paired four participants as data pen-pals in a six-week online asynchronous participatory design workshop. In response to the observed conceptual, technological, and emotional struggles with data, we subsequently organized a two-day in-person co-design workshop with 16 participants to further understand relevant visualization authoring and sensemaking strategies. Reflecting on how participants engaged with and represented data, we propose two strategies for cognitively accessible data visualizations: transforming numbers into narratives and blending data design with everyday aesthetics. Our findings emphasize the importance of involving individuals with IDD in the design process, demonstrating their capacity for data analysis and expression, and underscoring the need for a narrative and tangible approach to accessible data visualization.
title Our Stories, Our Data: Co-designing Visualizations with People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.16072