[Trainer-talk] Google funds new research to help blind web surfers, PhysOrg.com, March 30, 2010
David Andrews
dandrews at visi.com
Sun Apr 4 23:24:01 UTC 2010
>From: "Nightingale, Noel" <Noel.Nightingale at ed.gov>
>To: "'NFBWATLK at NFBNET.ORG'" <NFBWATLK at NFBNET.ORG>
>Date: Thu, 1 Apr 2010 16:44:16 -0500
>Thread-Topic: Google funds new research to help blind web surfers,
> PhysOrg.com, March 30, 2010
>Thread-Index: AcrRur8iwYBkUwBJSBWs3drjMjfMqwAKbEmw
>Subject: [nfbwatlk] Google funds new research to help blind web surfers,
> PhysOrg.com, March 30, 2010
>
>
>
>Link:
>http://www.physorg.com/news189181904.html
>
>Text:
>Google funds new research to help blind web surfers
>March 30, 2010
>
>(PhysOrg.com) -- New research by University of
>Manchester scientists that could help blind
>people find their way around the World Wide Web
>has been given a boost with a £50,000 grant from Google.
>
>Drs Andy Brown, Caroline Jay and Simon Harper
>who are based at the University's School of
>Computer
>Science<http://www.physorg.com/tags/computer+science/>,
>have already developed a prototype screen reader
>that has been successfully tested on blind web
>surfers in an independent evaluation.
>
>The team used specialist eye tracking techniques
>to find out how sighted people interact with
>complex Web pages so they could translate the pages into audio.
>
>Now they are working with
>Google<http://www.physorg.com/tags/google/> to
>make their technology, which is not yet suitable
>for general use, freely available to people with visual impairments.
>
>They aim to provide a way of modifying Web pages
>so blind people can easily access them without
>having to wait for commercial screen reading
>technology - which reads web
>pages<http://www.physorg.com/tags/web+pages/>
>aloud - to catch up with the latest research developments.
>
>Dr Jay said: "The growth of Web 2.0 technologies
>is fundamentally changing the way that people interact with the Web.
>
>"A short time ago, navigating the Web was simply
>a matter of clicking links, moving from one static page to another.
>
>"Now it's possible to spend a considerable
>amount of time interacting with a single page
>through its "dynamic micro content" that updates
>independently, without changing the URL."
>
>She added: "Unfortunately, blind
>people<http://www.physorg.com/tags/blind+people/>
> are excluded from many of these exciting
>developments and our research aims to change all that.
>
>"They can have real problems accessing web
>applications - such as calendars, tickers and
>suggestion lists - found on travel, entertainment and social networking sites.
>
>"This is because the screen reading technology
>which converts the visual page to audio doesn't
>say when a web page changes, making much of Web
>2.0 is inaccessible to people with visual impairments."
>
>More information: The detailed technical reports
>describing background, implementation and all
>the underlying research for the SASWAT project
>are available in the team's open-access data
>repository: http://hcw-prints.cs.man.ac.uk/view/subjects/saswat.html
>
>Provided by University of Manchester
>(news<http://www.physorg.com/partners/university-of-manchester/>
>: web<http://www.manchester.ac.uk/>)
More information about the Trainer-Talk
mailing list