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Making multimedia content accessible for screen reader users

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Published:07 May 2007Publication History

ABSTRACT

Rich and multimedia content is increasing rapidly on the Web. It is very attractive for sighted people, but it brings severe problems to screen reader users. Once the audio starts playing, it becomes hard for blind users to listen to the screen reader because there is physically only one volume control that cannot control the separate audio streams. Though there are often software-controlled buttons to control the audio, they are often controllable only with a mouse and are not associated with alternative text. Because of the audio conflicts and inaccessible control buttons, the multimedia content is often inaccessible to blind users. In addition, the use of dynamically changing interactive user interfaces is also a critical issue, since existing screen readers cannot detect such dynamic content changes.

We developed an accessible Internet browser for multimedia to address these problems and offer multimedia content as an information resource for the blind. It is characterized by three major features. First, it allows users to control the audio, such as the volume, play/stop, pause, and even the speed. Second, a dynamically adaptable metadata function is added to simplify complicated multimedia pages and to track dynamic changes and effectively inform users about the changes. Third, an audio description function supports Internet movies with a text format described by the metadata. In this paper, after briefly discussing the existing accessibility problems of multimedia content, we describe our accessible Internet browser for multimedia.

References

  1. Asakawa, C., Itoh, T., Takagi, H., and Miyashita, H. Accessibility evaluation for multimedia content. In UAHCI (2007).Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  2. Asakawa, C. and Takagi, H. Annotation-based transcoding for nonvisual Web access. In ASSETS (2000) Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  3. Asakawa, C., Takagi, H., Ino, S., and Ifukube, T. Maximum listening speeds for the blind. In International Community for Auditory Display 2003 (2003), pp. 276.279.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar

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  1. Making multimedia content accessible for screen reader users

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM Conferences
      W4A '07: Proceedings of the 2007 international cross-disciplinary conference on Web accessibility (W4A)
      May 2007
      179 pages
      ISBN:1595935908
      DOI:10.1145/1243441

      Copyright © 2007 ACM

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 7 May 2007

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      Acceptance Rates

      W4A '07 Paper Acceptance Rate11of27submissions,41%Overall Acceptance Rate171of371submissions,46%

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