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Dismantling societal barriers that limit people who need or use AAC (Light et al., 2025)

A presentation slide featuring a citation for a 2025 article by Janice Light, Susan Fager, Jessica Gormley, Glenda Watson Hyatt, and Erik Jakobs titled "Dismantling societal barriers that limit people who need or use AAC: lived experiences, key research findings, and future directions." Published in Augmentative and Alternative Communication. The slide also includes an image of a button with bold text that reads: “ATTITUDES ARE THE REAL DISABILITY.”

Now free at the AAC journal

Abstract
Society generally, and communication partners specifically, wield substantial power in determining access to augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) tools and controlling the opportunities for participation afforded to people who cannot rely on speech alone to be heard and understood. This paper integrates the lived experiences of people who need or use AAC with key research findings related to policy, practice, technology, attitude, knowledge, and skill barriers in society that limit people who need or use AAC. Future research and technology development is urgently required to dismantle societal barriers to ensure access to AAC and meaningful opportunities to participate in all aspects of society – education, employment, healthcare, leisure, family, and community.

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This paper was first presented at the Future of AAC Research Summit

Please cite as

Light, J., Fager, S. K., Gormley, J., Hyatt, G. W., & Jakobs, E. (2025). Dismantling societal barriers that limit people who need or use AAC: lived experiences, key research findings, and future directions. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/07434618.2025.2508490