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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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Face Tracking(also: Facial Tracking, Face Detection and Tracking)
A computer vision technology that detects and follows the position and movement of a user's face in real time using a camera or depth sensor. In accessibility, face tracking enables hands-free computer interaction for people with motor disabilities who cannot use traditional…
Facial Action Unit(also: Action Unit, AU, FACS Action Unit)
A component of the Facial Action Coding System (FACS) that represents a specific movement or position of facial muscles. Each action unit corresponds to a distinct facial movement, such as raising the inner eyebrow (AU1) or pulling the lip corner (AU12 for smiling). In…
Facial Gesture Recognition(also: Face Tracking, Facial Expression Recognition)
Technology that uses cameras and computer vision algorithms to detect and interpret facial movements and expressions in real time. For accessibility, facial gestures such as opening the mouth, raising eyebrows, smiling, or nose movements can be mapped to computer commands,…
Finger Tracking(also: Fingertip Tracking, Finger Detection, Hand Tracking)
Computer vision or sensor-based technology that detects and follows the position and movement of a user's fingers in real-time. In accessibility applications, finger tracking enables hands-free interaction with tactile graphics, touchscreens, and physical objects by monitoring…
Fitts's Law(also: Fitts Law)
Fitts's law is a predictive model of human movement that describes the time required to rapidly move to a target area as a function of the distance to the target and the target's size. Widely used in human-computer interaction (HCI) since the 1970s, it quantifies pointing…
Foot-Based Interaction(also: Foot Input, Foot Gesture Interaction)
An interaction technique that uses foot movements and gestures as input for controlling digital devices. Foot-based interaction is particularly relevant for people with upper body motor impairments who have functional lower limbs but cannot use their hands, including people with…
Force Feedback Joystick(also: Haptic Joystick, Rumble Joystick)
An input device that combines a traditional joystick with motors or actuators that apply physical resistance, vibration, or directional forces to the user's hand, providing tactile information about the virtual environment being navigated. In accessibility applications, force…

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