Glossary
Terms used in accessibility research and practice. Each entry has a definition, common aliases, and category tags.
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- Scanning Navigation(also: Non-Visual Scanning, Auditory Scanning)
- A non-visual navigation strategy in which a screen-reader or voice-browser user steps rapidly through a page one fragment at a time — line by line, item by item, or in fixed jumps (e.g. page-down keys) — listening just long enough to each fragment to detect an 'information…
- Sensory Compensation(also: Cross-Modal Plasticity, Sensory Substitution)
- The phenomenon whereby the loss of one sense leads to enhanced abilities in remaining senses, driven by neuro-plasticity — the brain's capacity to reorganise its neural pathways. Research shows that blind individuals, particularly those blind from birth or early childhood,…
- Social Interaction(also: Social Communication, Interpersonal Interaction)
- The process by which people act and react in relation to one another, including verbal conversation, non-verbal communication, and physical proximity. For people with disabilities, social interactions can be significantly affected — for example, individuals who are blind may…
- Sound Localization(also: Auditory Localization)
- The ability to determine the direction and distance of a sound source using auditory cues such as differences in timing and intensity between the two ears. Blind and visually impaired people often develop enhanced sound localization skills as a compensatory strategy for…
- Spatial Audio(also: 3D Audio, Spatialised Sound, Binaural Audio)
- Audio technology that creates the perception of sound coming from specific locations in three-dimensional space around the listener, using techniques such as head-related transfer functions (HRTFs), binaural rendering, and ambisonics. In accessibility, spatial audio can convey…
- Spatialized Sound(also: Spatial Audio, 3D Audio, Spatialized Audio)
- Audio that is rendered with positional information so that it appears to originate from a specific location in three-dimensional space around the listener. Spatialized sound uses techniques like head-related transfer functions (HRTFs), interaural time differences, and interaural…
- Stereo Vision(also: Stereoscopic Vision, Stereo Camera System, Stereopsis)
- A computer vision technique that uses two or more cameras positioned at slightly different viewpoints to extract three-dimensional depth information from a scene, mimicking the way human binocular vision perceives depth. In assistive technology, stereo vision systems have been…
- Suitcase Robot(also: Suitcase-shaped robot, Robotic suitcase)
- A class of autonomous navigation robots housed inside a rolling suitcase or carry-on-shaped enclosure, designed so that a blind or low-vision user can grip the handle and be guided to a destination while appearing to any onlooker to simply be walking with a piece of luggage. The…
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