Making Eye Contact Accessible: Augmenting Gaze in Job Interviews for People with Visual Impairments

Abstract

Job interviews rely heavily on nonverbal communication, with gaze serving as a central signal of attentiveness and competence. For This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. people with visual impairments, this creates an asymmetry that AHs 2026, Okinawa, Japan © 2026 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). disadvantages them: they are expected to demonstrate eye contact ACM ISBN 979-8-4007-2351-3/26/03 https://doi.org/10.1145/3795011.3795045 AHs 2026, March 16–19, 2026, Okinawa, Japan Wieland et al. but cannot access or reciprocate the gaze cues that structure interaction. To investigate these challenges in a high-stakes context, we conducted interviews with eight people with visual impairments, revealing how inaccessible gaze produces uncertainty, social pressure, and reliance on compensatory strategies. Based on these insights, we designed three visual cues, EYES, HALO, and FRAME, and evaluated them in a simulated job interview in virtual reality with 12 people with visual impairments. Our fndings show that spatially anchored cues around the interviewer’s face supported head alignment and improved perception of attentional focus, while peripheral cues were distracting. The study highlights the need for gaze cues that strike a balance between perceptual accessibility and social appropriateness in professional settings.

Publication
In Proceedings of the Augmented Humans International Conference 2026