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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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Central Vision(also: Foveal Vision)
Central vision is the area of sharpest sight in the visual field, corresponding to the fovea at the centre of the retina. It is responsible for detailed tasks such as reading, recognizing faces, and distinguishing fine detail and colour. Loss of central vision, commonly caused…
Central Vision Loss(also: Central Field Loss, Central Scotoma)
Loss of vision in the central part of the visual field, typically caused by damage to the macula — the area of the retina responsible for sharp, detailed vision. People with central vision loss experience difficulty seeing fine details directly in front of them, often describing…
Cerebral Visual Impairment(also: CVI, Cortical Visual Impairment)
Cerebral visual impairment (CVI) is an umbrella term for visual deficits resulting from damage to the brain rather than the eyes. It affects visual perception, including visual acuity, cortical image processing, and pattern recognition. CVI is often associated with additional…
Cocktail party effect(also: Selective auditory attention)
The well-documented human ability to focus auditory attention on a single speech source among multiple simultaneous conversations, while still detecting relevant information (such as one's name) in unattended streams. The cocktail party effect is foundational to the design of…
Color Identifier(also: Color Detector, Color Recognition Device)
A color identifier is an assistive technology device or application that detects and announces the color of objects for people with vision impairments. Standalone hardware devices use a light sensor pressed against an object to identify its color and speak the result aloud.…
Color Perception(also: Color Vision, Chromatic Vision)
Color perception is the ability to detect, distinguish, and identify colors. Impairments in color perception range from complete color blindness (achromatopsia) to partial deficiencies in distinguishing specific color ranges, such as red-green or blue-yellow color vision…
Concurrent speech interface(also: Simultaneous speech, Parallel audio streams)
An interaction paradigm that presents multiple speech audio streams simultaneously, spatially separated using techniques like head-related transfer functions, to enable users to scan or monitor several information items in parallel rather than listening to them sequentially.…
Cone Dystrophy(also: Cone-Rod Dystrophy)
A group of inherited eye disorders that affect the cone cells in the retina, which are responsible for color vision, central vision, and visual acuity in well-lit conditions. People with cone dystrophy typically experience progressive loss of color vision, decreased visual…
Corrective feedback(also: Error correction feedback, Instructional feedback)
Specific information provided to a user after an action that identifies what was done incorrectly and how to improve on the next attempt. In accessible interaction design, corrective feedback for blind users is typically delivered through text-to-speech (e.g., "make it longer,"…
Currency Accessibility(also: Accessible Currency, Banknote Accessibility)
The design of physical money — coins and banknotes — so that people with visual impairments or other disabilities can independently identify and use different denominations. Many countries produce banknotes in different sizes, colours, or with tactile features (raised print,…

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