AI and Accessibility
According to the World Health Organization, more than one billion people worldwide have disabilities. The field of disability studies defines disability through a social lens; people are disabled to the extent that society creates accessibility barriers. AI technologies offer the possibility of removing many accessibility barriers; for example, computer vision might help people who are blind better sense the visual world, speech recognition and translation technologies might offer real-time captioning for people who are hard of hearing, and new robotic systems might augment the capabilities of people with limited mobility. Considering the needs of users with disabilities can help technologists identify high-impact challenges whose solutions can advance the state of AI for all users; however, ethical challenges such as inclusivity, bias, privacy, error, expectation setting, simulated data, and social acceptability must be considered. The inclusivity of AI systems refers to whether they are effective for diverse user populations.
May-24-2020, 01:10:43 GMT
- AI-Alerts:
- 2020 > 2020-05 > AAAI AI-Alert for May 26, 2020 (1.00)
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.69)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.47)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area (0.67)
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Artificial Intelligence
- Applied AI (0.69)
- Natural Language (1.00)
- Speech > Speech Recognition (0.35)
- Communications > Social Media (0.95)
- Artificial Intelligence
- Information Technology