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Voice-First Design

Also known as: Voice-First Interface, Audio-First Design

A design approach for applications and interfaces where voice is the primary input and output modality, with visual elements being secondary or absent. Voice-first design is particularly relevant for accessibility tools serving visually impaired users, where the entire user experience — from onboarding to core functionality — is mediated through speech and audio. Key principles include providing voice-guided tutorials for first-time users, supporting natural voice commands rather than requiring memorization of specific phrases, delivering clear and concise audio feedback, and minimizing reliance on visual confirmation. Voice-first design differs from voice-enabled design, where voice is added to an existing visual interface, in that it treats audio as the foundational interaction channel from the start.

Category: user experience · assistive technology · human-computer interaction

Related: Voice Interaction · Text-to-Speech · Speech-to-Text · Non-Visual Interaction · Mobile Accessibility

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