Glossary
Terms used in accessibility research and practice. Each entry has a definition, common aliases, and category tags.
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- Capacity Building(also: Research Capacity Building, Capability Development)
- The process of developing and strengthening the skills, resources, and infrastructure that enable individuals, communities, and organizations to carry out research, develop technologies, and advocate for their needs effectively. In accessibility, capacity building involves…
- Codebook (Research)(also: Coding Manual, Qualitative Codebook)
- A codebook is a structured set of codes, definitions, and application rules used to systematically analyse qualitative data (interview transcripts, observation notes, documents) or to extract data from literature for review work. It typically specifies each code's name,…
- Community-Driven Research(also: Community-Based Research, Community-Led Research)
- A research approach where the community being studied plays a central role in defining research questions, designing methodologies, collecting data, and interpreting results. In accessibility, community-driven research ensures that disabled communities — particularly those in…
- Constructivist Grounded Theory(also: CGT)
- A qualitative research methodology developed by Kathy Charmaz that adapts classic grounded theory by acknowledging that the researcher's theoretical commitments and lived experience shape the categories that emerge from the data. Rather than claiming a neutral "view from…
- Coping Strategy(also: Coping Behavior, Adaptive Strategy)
- A behavioral pattern or workaround that users with disabilities employ when encountering inaccessible digital content or interfaces. Coping strategies emerge when technology fails to meet accessibility needs, forcing users to develop alternative approaches such as skipping…
- Counterbalancing(also: Latin Square Design)
- A research methodology technique used to control for order effects by systematically varying the sequence of conditions across participants. In accessibility research comparing multiple interface designs or assistive technology configurations, counterbalancing ensures that…
- Counterventions(also: Countervention)
- A concept introduced by Rua Williams, Louanne Boyd, and Juan Gilbert for reflexive interventions in HCI and design that unsettle ableist norms by shifting focus from individual deficit to exclusionary sociotechnical systems. Counterventions call for disabled people to be…
- Critical Realism(also: Transcendental Realism, Critical Naturalism)
- A philosophy of science developed by Roy Bhaskar that offers a middle position between positivism (reality is only what can be empirically observed) and radical constructivism (reality is entirely socially constructed). Critical realism holds that reality exists independently of…
- Critical Technical Practice(also: CTP)
- A research stance, articulated by Philip Agre in 1997, in which technologists reflect critically on the assumptions built into their own systems while continuing to build. Critical technical practice argues that technologies embody theory—every design choice encodes a…
- Cross-Border Accessibility Research(also: International Accessibility Research, Transnational Accessibility Research)
- Research collaborations that span national, cultural, and economic boundaries to address accessibility challenges that affect disabled people worldwide. Cross-border accessibility research aims to bridge the gap between well-resourced research institutions in the Global North…
- Cumulative Link Mixed Model(also: CLMM, Ordinal Mixed Model)
- A statistical model for analysing ordinal outcome data (such as Likert-scale ratings) that includes both fixed effects (experimental conditions) and random effects (participants, stimuli). CLMMs use a link function — commonly logit — to relate ordered categorical responses to…
11 results.