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The Harm in Conflating Aging with Accessibility
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The Harm in Conflating Aging with Accessibility

Bran Knowles, Vicki L. Hanson, Yvonne Rogers, Anne Marie Piper, Jenny Waycott, Nigel Davies, Aloha Ambe, Robin N. Brewer, Debaleena Chattopadhyay, Marianne Dee, …
Communications of the Association for Information Systems, Vol.64(7), pp.66-71
07/2021

Abstract

HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science T Technology (General)
"The quest for youth—so futile. Age and wisdom have their graces too."— Jean Luc Picard It is an increasingly global phenomenon that societies promote the notion of youth as the preferred state.a In stark contrast to the "wise elder" of ages past, today old age is assumed to be marked by loss of physical and cognitive ability, diminished relevance, and as we are sadly seeing with the COVID-19 pandemic, devalued humanity.18 In many ways, it is not surprising that such stereotypes are reflected in our technologies: tech companies compete for territory in an already overcrowded youth market; whereas older adults,b if considered users at all, are offered little more than fall alarms, activity monitors, and senior-friendly (often lower functionality) versions of existing tools. Meanwhile, there is a growing trend of workers aging out of the tech industry as early as their mid-40s,17 reflecting the higher value placed on the perspectives of those who represent the default target demographic. Knowles, B., Hanson, V., Rogers, Y. , Piper, A. M., Waycott, J., Davies, N., Ambe, A., Brewer, R. N., Chattopadhyay, D., Deepak-Gopinath, M., Gutierrez-Lopez, M., Jelen, B., Lazar, A., Nielek, R., Pena, B. B., Roper, A. 10.1145/3431280
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