The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

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THE COGNITIVE AND LEARNING DISABILITIES ACCESSIBILITY TASK FORCE (COGA) Update for WCAG March 2014 Lisa Seeman

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Page 1: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

THE COGNITIVE AND LEARNING DISABILITIES ACCESSIBILITY TASK FORCE (COGA)

Update for WCAGMarch 2014Lisa Seeman

Page 2: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

THE COGNITIVE AND LEARNING DISABILITIES ACCESSIBILITY TASK FORCE (COGA)

The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force is a task force of the Protocols and Formats Working Group (PFWG) and the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Working Group.

Aim: To improve Web accessibility for people with cognitive and learning disabilities.

Page 3: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

CONTENT

COGA - The work ahead of us, where we are Some issues What might we end up with?

Page 4: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

COGNITIVE DISABILITIES

Conditions that impact a person’s ability to use a website include: memory reading text problem solving keeping focused (attention span) computation (for example calculations)

Page 5: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

COGNITIVE DISABILITIES

The largest group of disabilities are people with cognitive disabilities For example: 115 million people with dementia worldwide by 2050

Meanwhile, many systems have become more and more complex Web applications TV interfaces, heating Phone systems

Page 6: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

THE COGNITIVE AND LEARNING DISABILITIES ACCESSIBILITY TASK FORCE

Creating a roadmap exploring how to make Web content more accessible and usable by different people and groups of people with Cognitive and Learning Disabilities: Review existing techniques and how they can be improved When necessary, develop techniques Develop suggested enhancements to existing W3C specifications Develop engineering approaches and author strategies for

further review

Page 7: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

CURRENT WORK - GAP ANALYSIS

UsersGap

AnalysisRoadma

p

Tech

Techniques

All on our wiki

Page 8: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

User groups

• Cognitive functions and symptoms

• Challenges in using ICT/ the Web

• Persona with use cases (challenges)

• How they use the web and ICT to include: Email, apps, voice systems, etc

• Otimized content and special pages

• Specific technologies / guidelines

Technology

• Technology overview

• User group challenges

• Potential for Cog A11y

• WCAG issues: • Adoption of

items relevant to cognitive disabilities and accessibility (Cog A11y)

• What is testable• Use cases

covered

Potential for inclusion

• Ideas of how inclusion could be improved

• Metadata for user to find alternative versions

• Tools for fast creation of alternative content (simplification tools?)

• Adaptive content • Information

resources such as: turning papers into presentations, translations tools

• Disadvantages and risks (e.g.: lowering reading age can be less precise, makes mistakes, etc.)

GAP ANALYSIS

Page 9: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

PHASE 1

Dyslexia Dyscalculia ADD/ADHD Brain injury, aphasia Non-vocal Dementia Down Syndrome Autism

Page 10: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple technique

s for everyone

Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 11: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple techniqu

es for everyon

e Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 12: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

SOME SIMPLE TECHNIQUES ARE GOOD FOR EVERYONE

Include short tooltips on all icons, jargon For non-standard UI, a help link should be viewable Help should be contact sensitive (F1 default?) Pressing 0 on a phone menu always gets you a person

These are just ideas….nothing formal

Page 13: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple technique

s for everyone

Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 14: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple technique

s for everyone

Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 15: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

SOME TIMES THE RIGHT INTERFACE MAY BE DIFFERENT FOR DIFFERENT USERS

Dyslexia or Dyscalculia Alzheimer's or Non-Vocal

SAVE

Page 16: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple techniqu

es for everyon

e Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 17: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

METADATA AND IMS:HELP PEOPLE FIND THE RIGHT ALTERNATIVE CONTENT

User Descriptor-------------------

Preferences

Page 18: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple technique

s for everyone

Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 19: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

SOME TIMES THE RIGHT INTERFACE MAY BE DIFFERENT FOR DIFFERENT USERS

SAVE

Page 20: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple techniqu

es for everyon

e Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 21: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

FINDING THE RIGHT TECHNIQUES2.2.5 When an authenticated session expires, the user can continue the activity without loss of data after re-authenticating. (Level AAA)

Guideline 2.4 Provide ways to help users navigate, find content, and determine where they are. Making links visually distinct (Advisory Techniques for Guideline

2.4)

Page 22: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

ISSUE 1 - AUTHOR FREEDOM

•Not necessarily be a legal requirement •for most content

•Many people want to increase their market •or simply accommodate as many people as possible

Page 23: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

ISSUE 2

People with different cognitive disabilities often need different things

But • Not always• We can handle it

Page 24: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple techniqu

es for everyon

e Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 25: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

SUPPORTIVE MATERIAL

Globish 1500 English words

Our own lexicon home – our main web page Facebook – a web site that connect people with friends Instructions on common interface elements Test with user groups

Page 26: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

WHAT MIGHT WE END UP WITH?

Accessibility for

Cognitive and LD

Simple techniqu

es for everyon

e Technique

structure

Techniques for

specific user

groupsMeta data to find the

right version

Semantics for

adaptive interface

s

Supportive

material

Page 27: The Cognitive and Learning Disabilities Accessibility Task Force ( COGA )

THE COGNITIVE AND LEARNING DISABILITIES ACCESSIBILITY TASK FORCE (COGA)

Thank you….. [email protected]