Health Data Visualization Literacy Skills of Young Adults with Down Syndrome and the Barriers to Inference-making

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Publication or External Link

External Link to Data Files

Date

Advisor

Citation

Wood, R., Feng, J. H., & Lazar, J. (2024). Health data visualization literacy skills of young adults with Down Syndrome and the barriers to inference-making. ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing. doi:10.1145/3648621

Abstract

As health management becomes more intertwined with data, an individual’s ability to read, interpret, and engage with personal health information in data visualizations is increasingly critical to one’s quality of care. People with Down Syndrome already experience greater health disparities than their typically developing peers. Inaccessible health information and technologies have the potential to magnify inequities further. Inaccessible health data can be an additional barrier to people with Down Syndrome’s ability to adopt and use health systems or devices, make informed decisions about their bodies, and advocate for themselves in health contexts. By examining their underlying data visualization literacy skills, our exploratory study involving ten young adults with Down Syndrome identifies several design opportunities to improve the accessibility of health data visualizations (HDVs) by addressing the cascade of negative effects caused by inference-making barriers in HDVs.

Notes

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/