Articles
In-depth pieces from our LinkedIn newsletter on neurodivergence, accessibility, and AI tools.
🔗 Subscribe on LinkedInGPS Found It. AI Made It Accessible.
By breaking complex journeys into manageable steps with real-time support, AI is helping neurodivergent and disabled people travel independently, and unlock new work opportunities.
Read on LinkedIn → InnovationWhat Physical Sovereignty Looks Like in 2026
Brain-computer interfaces and AI neuroprosthetics are giving people with paralysis, limb loss, and neuromuscular disease a path back to physical independence.
Read on LinkedIn → DesignWe Called It a Disability. It Was Always Our Design Flaw.
What we label as disability is often a failure of design and patience. AI can offer patience without performance, opening participation to people systems were never built for.
Read on LinkedIn → DiagnosisAI is Closing the Diagnostic Gap
From motion-tracking to EEG analysis, AI is speeding up autism and ADHD identification. The promise is real, but only if equitable access and inclusive design come first.
Read on LinkedIn → NeurodivergenceThey See What We Miss
Neurodivergent and disabled people aren't just AI's beneficiaries, they're its toughest testers, surfacing the gaps that reveal what these systems still need to become.
Read on LinkedIn → AccessibilityThe Tools Were Always There. Nobody Built the Map.
The hardest part of AI for neurodivergent people isn't the tools, it's finding them. Here's why that gap exists and how AccessAIbility sets out to close it.
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