1 / 23

Jeffrey P. Bigham Anna C. Cavender, Jeremy T. Brudvik, Jacob O. Wobbrock * and Richard E. Ladner

WebinSitu:. A Comparison of Blind and Sighted Browsing Behavior. Jeffrey P. Bigham Anna C. Cavender, Jeremy T. Brudvik, Jacob O. Wobbrock * and Richard E. Ladner Computer Science & Engineering The Information School* University of Washington. Introduction. Study Overview.

lavina
Download Presentation

Jeffrey P. Bigham Anna C. Cavender, Jeremy T. Brudvik, Jacob O. Wobbrock * and Richard E. Ladner

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. WebinSitu: A Comparison of Blind and Sighted Browsing Behavior Jeffrey P. Bigham Anna C. Cavender, Jeremy T. Brudvik, Jacob O. Wobbrock* and Richard E. Ladner Computer Science & Engineering The Information School* University of Washington

  2. Introduction Study Overview • Proxy-based observation for one week • 10 Blind and 10 Sighted (Ages 18-63) • Either Internet Explorer or Firefox • Blind participants used JAWS • 21,442 Pages • 4,204,904 Events Geographic Diversity of Users

  3. Introduction in situ Study • Valuable Qualities • Participants use their own tools • Familiar, preferred web pages • Observe longer time periods • Usage Patterns in Usual Browsing • Effects of web accessibility • Coping strategies employed • Differences in content chosen to view

  4. Introduction Important Complement to Prior Work [1] Takagi et al.Analysis of navigability of Web applications for improving blind usability. 2007. [2] Watanabe et al.Experimental evaluation of usability and accessibility of heading elements. 2007. [4] Coyne et al. Beyond alt text: Making the web easy to use for users with disabilities. 2001. [3] Lazar et al. Determining the impact of computer frustration on the mood of blind users. 2006.

  5. Outline • Introduction • Experimental Setup and Study Design • Browsing Differences • Effects of Content

  6. Setup and Study Design A Proxy-Based System • Used UsaProxy1 [1] Richard Atterer et al. Knowing the User's Every Move - User Activity Tracking for Website Usability Evaluation and Implicit Interaction. WWW 2007

  7. Setup and Study Design More than a regular proxy Requests GET http://webinsight.cs.washington.edu/, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:30 GET http://webinsight.cs.washington.edu/pics/web-eye.gif, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:30 GET http://webinsight.cs.washington.edu/css/style.css, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:31 … Actions Keypress, ctrl f, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:35 Mouse, 540x232, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:36 Focus, Text Box (name), 10 Oct 2007 04:12:36 AJAX, url=“http://www.cs.washington.edu/.../foo.php, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:36 Page Changed, 10 Oct 2007 04:12:39 … Content Image, alt=“Contact Us”, src=“http://www.washington.edu/pics/contact.gif Link, name=“University of Washington”, url=“http://www.washington.edu” …

  8. Setup and Study Design Easy Setup and Deployment • No New Software to Install • Works with Existing Tools

  9. Outline • Background • Experimental Setup and Study Design • Browsing Behavior • Effects of Content

  10. Browsing Differences Using the Mouse • Blind Users Don’t Use a Mouse • but, sometimes they have to % of Pages with Mouse Movements per Participant

  11. Browsing Differences Using the Mouse (why) “…if there's a command in a form or shopping cart that says, ‘click here,’ with no labeled button, I must route my cursor to that position…”

  12. Browsing Differences Probing: Following a link and returning in less than 30 seconds Call for Papers technical papers Technical Program technical program

  13. Browsing Differences Web Pages with Probes (p < 0.01)

  14. Browsing Differences Browsing Efficiency • Blind Users Less Efficient • Overall, ~2x longer per page • Contrast to 10x on completing tasks1 • Why not more? • Web pages, not tasks • Accustomed to Web Pages • “errors” (including probing) (p < 0.1) [1] Takagi et al.Analysis of navigability of Web applications for improving blind usability. 2007.

  15. Browsing Differences Using Google

  16. Outline • Background • Experimental Setup and Study Design • Browsing Differences • Effects of Content

  17. Effects of Content Images and Alternative Text (empty) Blind Users are Smart http://www.domain.com/proceed.gif http://www.domain.com/pubbank-button.gif http://www.domain.com/239080s.gif

  18. Effects of Content Images and Appropriate Alt. Text • % of Images with App. Alt. Text • Did not influence browsing behavior • Influenced Clicking Behavior: ClickedImages with App. Alt. Text (p < 0.01) % of Images Assigned Appropriate Alternative Text on Visited Pages

  19. Effects of Content Skip Links “Skip top navigation and go to home page content” 822 Skip Links Blind users clicked 5.6% “Skip links are almost always broken.”

  20. Effects of Content • Dynamic Content • 15.0x fewer pages viewed (p < 0.07) • 19.3x fewer interactions with dynamic content (p < 0.01) • AJAX • 7.5x fewer (p < 0.05) • Flash • 44.1% were ads • Blind participants used for sound content • Only 5.6% were main content

  21. Effects of Content Summary and Future Work • Main Points • Facilitated new type of study • Confirmed anecdotal observations • Interesting new directions • Many Remaining Questions • Efficiency and experience • Content requires using the mouse • Annotation of dynamic content (ARIA) • Extent of Flash accessibility • MANY OTHERS

  22. The End WebInSight webinsight.cs.washington.edu Thanks to: National Science Foundation Max Aller, Richard Atterer, Darren Gergle, Steve Gribble, Sangyun Hahn, Scott Rose, Lindsay Yazzolino.

  23. Background and Motivation Important Complement to Prior Work [1] Takagi et al.Analysis of navigability of Web applications for improving blind usability. 2007. [2] Watanabe et al.Experimental evaluation of usability and accessibility of heading elements. 2007. [3] Lazar et al. Determining the impact of computer frustration on the mood of blind users. 2006. [4] Coyne et al. Beyond alt text: Making the web easy to use for users with disabilities. 2001.

More Related