Despite the expansion of Deaf people's use of communication technology little is published about how they use electronic communication in their social and working lives and the implications for their concepts of identity and community. Australia is an ideal research base because the use of a range of technologies is widespread there. To gain access to a wide age range of people who identify as Deaf, members of the national organization, the Australian Association of the Deaf, were surveyed by mail. Results showed that Short Message Service (SMS), telephone typewriters (TTY), voice/TTY relay services, fax, and e-mail were used regularly. Deaf users are discerning of the purposes for which they use each method: SMS for social and personal interactions, TTY for longer communications and (via the relay service) with people and services without TTYs, fax for business and social contact, and computers for personal and business e-mails as well as Web browsing, accessing chat rooms, word processing, games, and study.
Journal article
Deaf people communicating via SMS, TTY, relay service, fax, and computers in Australia
Journal of Deaf Studies & Deaf Education, Vol.12(1), pp.80-92
2007
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Deaf people communicating via SMS, TTY, relay service, fax, and computers in Australia
- Creators
- Mary R Power - Bond UniversityDes Power - Griffith UniversityLouise Horstmanshof - Bond University
- Publication Details
- Journal of Deaf Studies & Deaf Education, Vol.12(1), pp.80-92
- Identifiers
- 1211; 991012820348202368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Health; Centre for Teaching and Learning; Human Sciences
- Resource Type
- Journal article