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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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Shannon Entropy(also: Information Entropy, Source Entropy)
A measure of the average uncertainty or unpredictability associated with a set of possible outcomes, defined by Claude Shannon as H = -Σ p(x) log₂ p(x), where p(x) is the probability of each outcome. In the context of interface evaluation, entropy quantifies how much uncertainty…
Signal Detection Theory(also: SDT)
A statistical framework used to measure the accuracy of a system or person in distinguishing between the presence and absence of a target signal amid noise. In accessibility and assistive technology research, Signal Detection Theory is used to evaluate how well detection systems…
Spearman correlation(also: Spearman rank correlation, Spearman's rho)
A non-parametric statistical measure of the strength and direction of the monotonic relationship between two ranked variables, ranging from -1 to +1. In accessibility evaluation research, Spearman correlation is used to assess how well automated metrics (such as Word Error Rate…
Statistical Graph(also: Statistical Chart, Data Graph, Quantitative Graph)
A visual representation of numerical or statistical data using geometric elements such as lines, bars, points, or areas to convey patterns, trends, relationships, and comparisons. Common types include line graphs (showing trends over time), bar charts (comparing categories), pie…
Stratified Sampling(also: Stratified Random Sampling)
Stratified sampling is a statistical technique that divides a population into non-overlapping subgroups (strata) that share some characteristic, then draws a random sample from each stratum. In accessibility evaluation, stratified sampling is used to pick test pages by first…

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