Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
skip to main content
article

Accessibility of audio and tactile interfaces for young blind people performing everyday tasks

Published: 01 November 2010 Publication History

Abstract

Increasingly, computers are becoming tools of communication, information exploring and studying for young people, regardless of their abilities. Scientists have been building knowledge on how blind people can substitute hearing or touch for sight or how the combination of senses, i.e., multimodalities, can provide the user with an effective way of exploiting the power of computers. Evaluation of such multimodal user interfaces in the right context, i.e., appropriate users, tasks, tools and environment, is essential to give designers accurate feedback on blind users’ needs. This paper presents a study on how young blind people use computers for everyday tasks with the aids of assistive technologies, aiming to understand what hindrances they encounter when interacting with a computer using individual senses, and what supports them. A common assistive technology is a screen reader, producing output to a speech synthesizer or a Braille display. Those two modes are often used together, but the research studied how visually impaired students interact with computers using either form, i.e., a speech synthesizer or a Braille display. A usability test has been performed to assess blind grade-school students’ ability to carry out common tasks with the help of a computer, including solving mathematical problems, navigating the web, communicating with e-mail and using word processing. During the usability tests, students were allowed to use either auditory mode or tactile mode. Although blind users most commonly use a speech synthesizer (audio), the results indicate that this was not always the most suitable modality. While the effectiveness of the Braille display (tactile user interface) to accomplish certain tasks was similar to that of the audio user interface, the users’ satisfaction rate was higher. The contribution of this work lies in answering two research questions by analysing two modes of interaction (tactile and speech), while carrying out tasks of varying genre, i.e., web searching, collaboration through e-mail, word processing and mathematics. A second contribution of this work is the classification of observations into four categories: usability and accessibility, software fault, cognitive mechanism and learning method. Observations, practical recommendations and open research problems are then presented and discussed. This provides a framework for similar studies in the future. A third contribution of this work is the elaboration of practical recommendations for user interface designers and a research agenda for scientists.

Cited By

View all
  • (2024)A Recipe for Success? Exploring Strategies for Improving Non-Visual Access to Cooking InstructionsProceedings of the 26th International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility10.1145/3663548.3675662(1-15)Online publication date: 27-Oct-2024
  1. Accessibility of audio and tactile interfaces for young blind people performing everyday tasks

        Recommendations

        Comments

        Information & Contributors

        Information

        Published In

        cover image Universal Access in the Information Society
        Universal Access in the Information Society  Volume 9, Issue 4
        November 2010
        109 pages
        ISSN:1615-5289
        EISSN:1615-5297
        Issue’s Table of Contents

        Publisher

        Springer-Verlag

        Berlin, Heidelberg

        Publication History

        Published: 01 November 2010

        Author Tags

        1. Accessibility
        2. Audio
        3. Blind
        4. Multimodal
        5. Tactile
        6. Tasks
        7. Usability

        Qualifiers

        • Article

        Contributors

        Other Metrics

        Bibliometrics & Citations

        Bibliometrics

        Article Metrics

        • Downloads (Last 12 months)0
        • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)0
        Reflects downloads up to 27 Jan 2025

        Other Metrics

        Citations

        Cited By

        View all
        • (2024)A Recipe for Success? Exploring Strategies for Improving Non-Visual Access to Cooking InstructionsProceedings of the 26th International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility10.1145/3663548.3675662(1-15)Online publication date: 27-Oct-2024

        View Options

        View options

        Figures

        Tables

        Media

        Share

        Share

        Share this Publication link

        Share on social media