Deceptive Patterns
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Revealed or Reinforced: How Assistive Technologies Shape the Experience with Dark Patterns for Blind and Low-Vision Users

Author
Agata Stanczyk, Mindy Tran, Tarini Saka, Yixin Zou, Veelasha Moonsamy
Date
12 Jun 2026
Publisher
Proceedings of the 2026 Designing Interactive Systems Conference
Focus
HCI & Psychology
Category
Academic Scholar

This work conducts an in-lab user study with 18 BLV participants using a custom-built social media application that embeds six common dark patterns, conceptualizing this mechanism as assistive amplification and showing how dark patterns manifest differently for BLV users, informing the design of more inclusive and manipulation-resistant interfaces.

Dark patterns have gained increasing attention among the HCI and design communities, but little is known about how they intersect with assistive technologies (ATs) and impact people with accessibility needs, such as blind and low-vision (BLV) individuals. To address this gap, we conducted an in-lab user study with 18 BLV participants using a custom-built social media application that embeds six common dark patterns. Through observing participant experiences with assigned tasks and semi-structured post-study interviews, we explored how screen readers and magnification tools influence the perception and amplification of deceptive design elements. In contrast to prior work that identified accessibility-induced deception, our findings demonstrate a dual role of ATs where dark patterns are either revealed or intensified.