Visually impaired people and the emerging connected TV: a comparative study of TV and Web applications’ accessibility
Title | Visually impaired people and the emerging connected TV: a comparative study of TV and Web applications’ accessibility |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Authors | Costa, Daniel, and Duarte, Carlos |
Journal | Universal Access in the Information Society |
Pagination | 1-18 |
Keywords | Accessibility, blind, TV, usability, visual disability |
Abstract | With the TV signal digitization and the current market growth of connected TVs, the authors envision the appearance of accessibility barriers to visually impaired persons. The paper addresses the following hypothesis: (1) visually impaired users want to extend their TV usage to explore new TV features; (2) TV applications are in less conformance with accessibility guidelines compared to their Desktop versions. Additionally, the authors wanted to assess whether guideline conformance reflected real TV accessibility problems experienced by users. The methods used for this study included surveys aimed at characterizing the interest of the visually impaired population regarding the use of TV, and specifically of Web applications on TV, an automated accessibility evaluation to compare TV and Desktop versions of the same Web application, to understand their conformance with accessibility guidelines, and a user study where participants with visual impairments were asked to perform some tasks on both versions. From the survey, we confirmed that people with visual disabilities are interested in extra features on their TV. Results from the automated accessibility evaluation show that TV applications are in a significantly better level of conformance with accessibility guidelines. The user study has illustrated that users were unable to complete any task using the TV versions of the applications. The results from these studies demonstrated that the new features that come with connected TVs still have a long way to go in order to be accessible by all. Furthermore, they lead us to concur with other works that automated evaluations are not enough to assess the accessibility of a Web page. |
Notes | This study examined the issue of TV accessibility for visually impaired users. Specifically, it supposed that visually impaired users would be willing to adopt new TV features, but TV applications would prevent them from comfortable accessibility compared with their desktop counterparts. Results showed that visually impaired users did prefer to try new features. However, the TV application actually conformed better with accessibility guidelines. A survey from visually impaired users, on the other hand, indicated that they could not complete tasks using the TV applications. |
URL | http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10209-016-0451-6 |
DOI | 10.1007/s10209-016-0451-6 |
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