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Visual Context Switching

Also known as: Visual Attention Switching, Gaze Switching

The act of shifting visual focus between multiple sources of information, such as between a sign language interpreter and a presentation screen, or between captions and a speaker's face. For deaf and hard of hearing users, visual context switching is a significant accessibility barrier because all their information channels are visual — unlike hearing users who can listen to speech while looking at slides. Each switch risks missing information from the source not being watched, creating cognitive load and information gaps.

Category: Cognitive accessibility · Interaction

Related: Cognitive load · Deaf · Sign Language Interpreter · Note-Taking · Communication Access

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