1 / 24

Access to Emergency Alerts for People with Sensory Disabilities

This project focuses on providing accessible emergency alerts for people with sensory disabilities. Efforts include forming an advisory board, establishing a working group, and creating information requirements based on existing authoritative works. The project aims to develop a demonstration model and conduct usability testing.

Download Presentation

Access to Emergency Alerts for People with Sensory Disabilities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Access to Emergency Alerts for People with Sensory Disabilities 2nd Annual Advisory Board Meeting Thursday February 23, 2006 Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Marcia Brooks Project Director WGBH National Center for Accessible Media (NCAM) 617.300.3431 marcia_brooks@wgbh.org

  2. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Formed Advisory Board • Formed Working Group • Includes emergency management personnel, providers of notification services and equipment, and others • Meets monthly via phone conference

  3. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Working Group, continued: • Established working group “wiki” (collaborative editing environment) • Varied resources • White papers, project documents in progress, social science research • Concept map, to facilitate gap analysis

  4. Concept Map Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access

  5. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Draft information requirements suggest how a warning message should integrate the relevant needs of people with sensory disabilities within: • Database management and information processing • Alert distribution systems • Receiver equipment

  6. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Information requirements drawn from existing authoritative works: • National Science and Technology Council “Red Book” report on “Effective Disaster Warnings” • OASIS Emergency Management Technical Committee warning format requirements • World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines

  7. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Established Public Access Repository • Summary documents of user needs • Design requirements for accessible products and services • Usability research • Subject-related news articles & conference announcements

  8. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Outreach • Presented overview of e-mail alert services at “Accessible Emergency Notification and Communication State of the Science” conference at Gallaudet • Submitted paper for Third Annual International Meeting of Information Systems for Crisis Response & Management at New Jersey Institute of Technology

  9. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Establishing contacts at Massachusetts state agencies, to develop state model for notification • Developing partner relationships to conduct testing and develop demonstration models

  10. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Efforts to Date • Just completed consumer focus groups (Mary Watkins) • With the RERC on Telecommunications Access, filed comments to the FCC regarding the Emergency Alert System (Gerry Field)

  11. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access What’s Ahead • Refine use cases, information requirements • Conduct usability testing • Develop demonstration model • Conduct test implementations and evaluations of use cases in products and services • Continue development of information repository • Project concludes September 30, 2007

  12. Focus Groups Update Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Mary Watkins Outreach Director Media Access Group at WGBH

  13. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups • Convened to solicit direct input from the community:a. How emergency messages are receivedb. The content and usefulness of messagesc. Satisfaction and/or frustration with aboved. Ideal delivery mechanisms and message content

  14. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups • Tech Savvy and Non-Tech Savvy Consumers:- Hard-of-Hearing and Late-deafened Consumers(NVRC)- Deaf and Hard of Hearing Consumers (TDI) - Blind and Visually Impaired Consumers (AFB) - Deaf-Blind consumers (Helen Keller National Ctr)

  15. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups • Hard-of-Hearing and Late-deafened Consumers • Receive emergency information via: - Television- Radio (if residual hearing) - E-mail or news Web sites (text as online video not captioned)- Personal devices such as pagers, cell phones, Blackberries- From family, neighbors, strangers

  16. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups • Tech Savvy Hard-of-Hearing and Late-deafened ConsumersConcerns: - Broadcast weather alerts utilize Doppler/area maps that make pinpointing locations difficult without benefit of audio- Power outages, extreme vulnerability in the dark- Relevance of emergency messages via e-mail diluted by less than vital information (“high wind” warnings)- PA systems in public spaces not useful (hearing aids block background noise)

  17. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Hard-of-Hearing and Late-deafened Consumers Wish List- Text displays in public buildings - Hearing aid coupled with a PA system to transmit emergency messages directly (Bluetooth)- Portable speech to text device- GPS in cell phone with local emergency mgmt agency reachable - Radio text alerts- Captioned Internet video, easy to activate, delivered in real time- Device to wake you, complete with external power supply

  18. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups • Ideal messages for deaf, hard of hearing and late-deafened consumers:Notification and what to doURL for more informationDevelop consistency: keywords, order of infoOffer hierarchy of notification options/scenariosOffer variety of message detail based on device text display (address problem of truncated text)

  19. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Ideal messages for deaf consumers:- Establish color codes and keywords for people who don’t have great English skills (broadcast or text msgs)- Incorporation of sign language interpreters for emergency newscasts or e-mailed alerts

  20. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Non Tech Savvy Hard-of-Hearing and Late-deafened ConsumersIdeal Messages- Messages delivered via existing public tech vs. personal devices - Method of capturing TV captioning text if missed or if scrolling too fast - LED signs on highways, display alerts in cars - TV station/channel with text information on full screen- Neighborhood watch program (though privacy/safety concern)- Programs to have police/fire personnel notify household

  21. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Blind and visually impaired consumers receive emergency information/notification via:Radio, television (increasingly), ham radio (fast, direct) Satellite radio Weather radios that turn on during emergencies Automated calls by local emergency agencies E-mail alerts from local tv stations Sirens if in a small or rural communityFamily, friends, neighbors (secondary source)

  22. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Blind and visually impaired consumers expressed these concerns: - Televised text scrolls and graphics cater to sighted audience - TV reporters that say “over here” and “in the red area” - Diminishing number of locally owned and operated radio stations (hence availability and reliability of local alerts) - Stations (tv and radio) that cover wide areas and therefore don’t provide enough specifics during weather events - Training of public officials needed, especially around importance of guide dogs (not a pet)

  23. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Suggestions from blind and visually impaired consumers: - Improve what currently exists, take what “is” and make it more accessible - Broadcast audio warnings in additional languages - Use beepers to alert users to emergency situation, seek further info - 800 number for emergency info in your area - Phone options preferable to instant messaging - Dissemination software that can send messages via more than one type of media/device - Stick with low tech options to maximize accessibility

  24. Access Alerts Project ncam.wgbh.org/alerts www.incident.com/access Focus Groups Suggestions on message content from Blind and Visually Impaired consumers: - Relatively few complaints on quality of warning notification now - EAS warnings taken seriously, capture attention, build on this with tones on other devices - Improve broadcast weather reports by reducing vague pointing and “over here/there” - Concern comes with “what do I do now” post evacuation (transportation, shelters, etc. when away from home and tv/radio) Suggestion beyond current project: Engage local communities of blind and visually impaired consumers and first responders similar to TDI’s CEPIN project

More Related