Queer, Nonbinary, or Ambiguous? Rethinking Voice Labels through Queer Theory in HCI
Paper i proceeding, 2026

This paper explores how feminist and queer theories can inform voice design in technology, particularly in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). It argues that biological sex and gender are socially constructed and performative, and that voice is a site where identity is both enacted and interpreted. Building on this framework, the paper examines the political and cultural implications of labels such as "ambiguous", "queer"and "nonbinary"in voice design. While "ambiguous"voices aim to reduce gendering broadly, "queer"and "nonbinary"voices intentionally represent gender-non-conforming people and challenge binary thinking. To ground this analysis in community perspectives, we report findings from a survey with nonbinary participants, examining how they label voices constructed from gender-expansive individuals and which terms they find most affirming. With this work, we offer practical guidelines for labelling voices in ways that affirm queer and nonbinary identities, clarifying when terms like "queer"and "nonbinary"are preferable and when "ambiguous"may be appropriate. Recognising these distinctions is key to ethical, inclusive design.

Gender-Ambiguous Voice

Queer Studies

Nonbinary Voice

Gender Studies

Voice Technology

Voice Design

Queer Voice

Författare

Martina De Cet

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Interaktionsdesign och Software Engineering

Göteborgs universitet

Maxwell Hope

University of Delaware

Ilaria Torre

Göteborgs universitet

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Interaktionsdesign och Software Engineering

Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Proceedings

187
9798400722783 (ISBN)

2026 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI 2026
Barcelona, Spain,

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Genusstudier

Sociologi

DOI

10.1145/3772318.3791246

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2026-05-25