Hi all,

At Change Seminar of April 2nd, we're grateful to have *Sharon Heung* (she/her)
give a talk on *Towards Addressing Ableism on Social Media.*

*Abstract:* Social media is essential for the disability community as an
accessible alternative to socialize with others, advocate, and educate
others about disability, and provide emotional and information peer support
between disabled* people. While social media has fostered a sense of
belonging for the disability community, disabled social media users are
targets of ableism and disability-related hate online. Similar to other
historically marginalized individuals, disabled people are more at-risk of
experiencing identity-attacks that are damaging to their psychological and
emotional well-being and may lead to self-censorship. The very platforms
used for community support may also facilitate further marginalization of
disabled people.



In this talk, I will share my existing contributions in understanding
ableism on social media: (1) ableist microaggressions experienced by
disabled social media users and (2) ableist hate and harassment experienced
by disabled content creators. I will highlight different forms of ableism,
including ableist speech (e.g. mocking & invalidating disability identity)
and instances of platform-enabled ableism (e.g. wrongful censorship).
Throughout, I will emphasize the immediate emotional harm and the long-term
impact of experiencing ableism online. I will then present my ongoing work
towards addressing ableism on social media, including designing moderation
tools to mitigate the harm of viewing ableist content.



*We use the term disabled people, since identity-first language is
preferred by disability rights groups, the disability justice movement, and
mimics the language our participants used.


*Presenter Bio:* Sharon Heung is a PhD Candidate at Cornell Tech advised by
Aditya Vashistha and Shiri Azenkot. Her work is at the intersection
of accessibility, human-computer interactions, and digital safety. Her
research aims to understand platform-enabled ableism on social media to
better support disabled people’s self-expression and safety online. This
includes examining disability-related discrimination by other users and how
platforms facilitate and exacerbate such harmful experiences. She hopes to
reimagine a more inclusive digital space with and for the disability
community. Prior to Cornell, she received her bachelor’s in Human Centered
Design and Engineering at the University of Washington and worked at AT&T's
Experience Design Studio research team. Her work has been supported by the
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship.

*Resources: *Papers on ableist microaggression
<https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3517428.3544801> and ableist hate and
harassment
<https://www.adityavashistha.com/uploads/2/0/8/0/20800650/ableism-chi-2024.pdf>
.

*Location:* Tuesday from 12-1pm PST in 387 CSE2 (The Bill and Melinda Gates
Center) or on *Zoom:* https://washington.zoom.us/j/9744652312
<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://washington.zoom.us/j/9744652312&sa=D&source=calendar&ust=1711908623558084&usg=AOvVaw0kJOm27m-eY1qpdqX_7cp6>

Best,
UW Change Organizers
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