A better way
Elena Sabinson demonstrates using an inflatable sensory band in her office. Part of Sabinson's research looks at inflatable surfaces and products that can be used by people managing anxiety to make them more comfortable in their environment.
By Joe Arney
Photos by Kimberly Coffin (CritMedia, StratCommā18)
Thereās a brick paver walkway that crosses 18th Street on the CU Boulder campus by the ATLAS Institute. Thousands of pedestrians use it each day, crossing the brick path while cyclists, e-scooters, buses, emergency vehicles and the occasional car wend their way down the street.Ģż
ĢżāDesign is a powerful tool to make an impact, because then weāre not telling certain people theyāre functionally not correct. Instead, weāre saying, how do we create an environment that actually matches the needs of the user?Ģż
Elena Sabinson
Director
Neuro D Lab
Is it a crosswalk?
From the description above, you might assume so. But thereās no signage warning drivers of pedestrian activity, or telling them to stop or yield. And youāll find none of the striping associated with crosswalks.Ģż
āWhen the students describe it, theyāre like, āItās basically Frogger out there,āā said Elena Sabinson, an assistant professor of environmental design at CMCI and director of the Neuro D Lab, which explores the intersection of design, neurodiversity, equity and innovation. āThat space of ambiguity becomes a place where conflict or confusion happens. The lab looks at how that affects everyone, but especially neurodivergent folks who might rely on clarity and clear signage to understand how to navigate things.āĢż
Neurodivergence has become a global point of conversation as a movement builds to both recognize that each brain functions differently and to better understand how to design products, services, buildings and so on that serve everyone, instead of asking people to conform to the built environment.
āDesign is a powerful tool to make an impact, because then weāre not telling certain people theyāre functionally not correct,ā Sabinson said. āInstead, weāre saying, how do we create an environment that actually matches the needs of the user?āĢż

Elena Sabinson crosses the street in front of the CASE building. While the brick paver walkway looks like a crosswalk, it lacks striping and signage indicating it's safe to cross, which can confuse both pedestrians and drivers. Part of Sabinson's research work involves assessing wayfinding on the CU Boulder campus for confusing design cues.
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A new direction for her work
Sabinson is uniquely suited to such challenges. As a PhD student at Cornell University, she was studying self-soothing technologiesāespecially in the area of soft robotics, like breathing wall panels that help people regulate their biorhythms during stressful experiencesāwhen she received a diagnosis of autism and ADHD.
āThat changed the trajectory of my research,ā she said. āIām still focusing on emotional well-being, but with this environmental lens of how to create inclusive, accessible products that are centered around self determination, agency and empowerment.Ģż
āI make a choice to say Iām an autistic-led lab, and I invite this type of conversation in by making that choice, rather than just being an autistic person doing research.ā
Bringing students into her lab and giving them opportunities to engage these challenges will, she said, push her to question some of her own assumptions developed after years of working in the field. But itās also creating opportunities to potentially reshape the campus, such as the wayfinding project examining features like the ambiguous campus crosswalk.Ģż
That work is partially funded by an undergraduate research opportunities program grant issued by the university. Earlier this month, Sabinsonās work was accepted by EDRA56, the influential conference of the Environmental Design Research Association. Sheās looking forward to presenting it this May, in addition to helping drive conversations around making the campus easier to navigate.Ģż
āOne thing we have as a research lab is access to students who are really engaged and passionate about this work, and who want to take on projects that canāt always happen in industry, due to timeline and budgetary constraints,ā she said.Ģż
Industry feedback
Another thing she wants through both the lab and her classes is the chance for ideas from industry to influence her studentsā innovation. In a course she teaches on fidgets and stims, one student created the Cacti Clicker, a plastic cactus with moveable segments. When you twist it, it makes a clicking sound, which isnāt always acceptable in a work or school setting.Ģż
āSo the student redesigned it so some of the spins make noise and some donāt, so you can still get the sensation if youāre in a crowded space,ā Sabinson said. āThatās an example of how we field test these products with people, get feedbackāand learn to take feedbackāto make their products better.ā
It also doesnāt look like a traditional fidget toy. Thatās also by designāit just looks like a cactus statue on a desk in Sabinsonās office.Ģż
āA lot of what I consider in my work, and that we talk about in class, is the social stigma around using a fidgetāthat a lot of people might want to, but theyāre considered to be toys,ā she said.Ģż
The bigger goal is to eliminate that stigma altogetherābut in the meantime, she said, this product is an option for people who need it, while ājust living on your desk and looking like a decoration.ā