March 2026
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Designing for Cognitive Accessibility
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One of the quieter but important themes at this year’s CSUN Assistive Technology Conference was cognitive accessibility. Accessibility conversations often focus on screen readers, captions, and keyboard navigation. Those are essential. But many of the barriers people face when using technology are not physical. They are cognitive. Interfaces that are confusing, overwhelming, unpredictable, or mentally Continue reading
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Beyond Compliance: Sessions at CSUN 2026 That Embraced the Broader Spectrum of Disability and Inclusive Design
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At the CSUN Assistive Technology Conference 2026, I found myself drawn to sessions that widened the frame. Not just sessions about websites, audits, or checklists. Not just sessions about whether something passed or failed. I was most interested in the work that treated disability as broad, lived, and interconnected. The sessions that looked at mobility, Continue reading
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Don’t make me think… like a designer
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You walk up to a door with a big handle that clearly says pull. So you pull. Nothing happens. Then you notice the tiny sign that says PUSH. That moment is small, but it stays with you. You hesitate. You feel a little foolish, even though the problem was not you. The design told you Continue reading
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Establishing a spoon theory policy at Intuit
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Most people don’t think about their energy. Day’s are full of physical and cognitive activities, stress, and challenges. If we need a boost, we grab some coffee or rest our eyes for a few minutes. After a bit, we’re ready to jump back in. But many people don’t have endless energy supplies. Physical, cognitive, and Continue reading
