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Glossary

Terms used in accessibility research and practice. Each entry has a definition, common aliases, and category tags.

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ASL(also: American Sign Language)
Abbreviation for American Sign Language, the primary sign language used by Deaf communities in the United States and much of Canada. ASL is a complete, natural language with its own grammar, vocabulary, and specialized registers (including STEM vocabulary), and is linguistically…
ASL education technology(also: Sign language learning technology)
Technology designed to support the teaching and learning of American Sign Language, ranging from video-based instructional platforms and feedback systems to computer vision tools that analyse signing performance. ASL education technology is an accessibility enabler because…
ASR Captioning(also: Automatic Captioning, Live Auto-Captioning, AI Captioning)
The use of automatic speech recognition (ASR) technology to generate real-time text captions of spoken language, commonly used as an accessibility tool for Deaf and Hard of Hearing individuals in meetings, lectures, and video calls. Unlike professional captioning services (such…
Acoustic Activity Recognition(also: Sound Activity Recognition, Audio Activity Recognition, Environmental Sound Recognition)
The use of microphones and machine learning to automatically identify and classify sounds occurring in an environment, such as doorbells, alarms, appliances, speech, and other everyday acoustic events. Acoustic activity recognition is particularly relevant to accessibility for…
Affective Captions(also: Affective Captioning, Emotive Captions)
Captions that convey not only the spoken words but also the emotional qualities of speech — such as valence (positive vs. negative tone) and arousal (intensity) — typically through typographic modulations like font-color, font-weight, or font-size, and increasingly through…
American Sign Language(also: ASL)
A complete, natural language with its own grammar, syntax, and vocabulary, expressed through hand shapes, facial expressions, and body movements, used primarily by Deaf communities in the United States and parts of Canada. ASL is not a signed version of English—it has distinct…
Assistive Listening Device(also: ALD, Hearing Assistive Technology)
Any device designed to improve audibility for a person with hearing loss, beyond or in addition to a hearing aid or cochlear implant. Common examples include personal amplifiers, FM and radio-frequency systems, infrared systems, and induction loop (hearing loop) systems…
Audio-Language Model(also: ALM, Audio LLM)
A multimodal artificial intelligence model that jointly processes audio signals and natural language text, enabling it to generate detailed textual descriptions of audio content, answer questions about sounds, and reason about auditory scenes. Audio-language models like…
Audio-Reactive Visuals(also: Sound-Reactive Displays, Audio-Visual Feedback)
Visual display systems that respond in real time to audio input, translating sound properties such as frequency, amplitude, pitch, and rhythm into light, color, and movement. In accessibility contexts, audio-reactive visuals serve as a sensory substitution channel for d/Deaf and…
Auditory Scene Analysis(also: ASA, Computational Auditory Scene Analysis)
The process by which the auditory system organizes and interprets complex mixtures of sounds into distinct perceptual events or streams, allowing listeners to separate and identify individual sound sources within an environment. In accessibility contexts, auditory scene analysis…
Auditory processing disorder(also: APD, Central auditory processing disorder, CAPD)
A neurological condition in which the brain has difficulty interpreting and organizing sounds despite normal hearing ability. Unlike hearing loss, auditory processing disorder affects how the central auditory nervous system processes what is heard, making it difficult to…
Aural Interface(also: Voice Interface, Voice-Controlled Interface, Voice User Interface)
An aural interface is a user interface that relies primarily on spoken language for both input (voice commands) and output (spoken responses). Examples include Amazon Alexa, Apple Siri, and Google Assistant. While aural interfaces have become increasingly popular due to their…
Automatic Caption Evaluation(also: ACE, ACE Framework, ACE Metric)
A caption-quality evaluation framework introduced by Sushant Kafle and Matt Huenerfauth (2017-2018) that scores automatically generated captions based on their usability for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing readers, rather than simply counting transcription errors. For each mismatch…

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