This white paper reviews the types of personal assistive technology (AT) that voters might use in the polling place. It focuses on technologies that are either currently in common use, or in early stages of development and may be widely available in the future.
It was written in 2016 to support the development of updated voting system standards for accessibility by considering what technologies elections offices might consider to help people with disabilities vote more independently.
This white paper reviews personal assistive technology that voters might use in the polling place — both what’s available now and what’s likely to become common within the next 5-10 years.
The broad goal of using technology is to ensure that voters can use the communication and interaction methods that are most familiar to them while voting.
The requirements in the first version of the VVSG were drafted before the widespread availability of mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets. The extraordinary expansion in technology generally, coupled with the specific availability of mobile devices, has changed the landscape in several ways:
Looking at emerging technology can help us predict which technologies might become so common that they are an expected part of everyday life, much as the idea that anyone can have a camera, phone, and GPS in their pocket. Like other standards, requirements for voting systems need to be robust to assure they remain useful over many years. only include the most important points here, and close by directing readers to the full report above.
This white paper was prepared by Whitney Quesenbery, Center for Civic Design, and Jennifer Sutton, JSutton Media, for the EAC-NIST Human Factors Public Working Group. This work was performed in collaboration with NIST under financial assistance award 70NANB14H240 from the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Visit our page on voting systems to find more resources about the usability and accessibility of voting systems.