Craig Anderton

Award-Winning HCI PhD Candidate A11y Researcher

Objective Statement

I am currently researching sensory augmentation in immersive environments, with the aim of making virtual reality more accessible to people with sensory impairments. I have contributed to high-impact publications in leading conferences and journals, including winning the Student Research Competition Graduate Gold Medal at ASSETS '22 as a Master's student, a first author publication in the Q1 IJHCI journal within the first year of my PhD, and a first author full paper at CHI '25. With a background marked by academic excellence, distinguished awards, and a lived experience of disability, I am dedicated to leveraging my expertise to explore practical solutions in the creation of accessible immersive environments.

Featured Research

Investigating Sign Language Interpreter Rendering and Guiding Methods in Virtual Reality 360-Degree Content (ASSETS '22) - SRC Graduate Gold Medal 🥇 (opens in a new tab)

This award-winning research explored methods for presenting sign language interpreters within 360-degree videos to improve accessibility for d/Deaf users. doi for Sign Language Interpreter Rendering (opens in a new tab) - PDF for Sign Language Interpreter Rendering (opens in a new tab) - Video for Sign Language Interpreter Rendering (opens in a new tab) - Poster for Sign Language Interpreter Rendering (opens in a new tab)

Portfolio

Accessibility of Commercial VR

Exploring the accessibility of the 330 most popular VR applications: published and presented at CHI '25

VR Locomotion

Categorising locomotion in VR applications: published in the International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction

Sign Language in VR

Investigating rendering and guiding methods for interpreters in 360-degree content: SRC Graduate Gold Medal at ASSETS '22