Hearing Impaired
Cognitive & Learning Disabilities Need (CC)
People with cognitive or learning disabilities, such as dyslexia and short-term memory deficit, need more general web accessibility solutions, which include providing a consistent design and using simplified language. For example, by using a template, a Web developer can reuse the same layout and design for each page, so a person with a cognitive disability can more easily navigate through a Web site. People with cognitive or learning disabilities can also benefit from redundant input, such as providing both an audio file and a transcript of a video. By simultaneously viewing the text and hearing it read aloud, they can take advantage of both auditory and visual skills to comprehend the material better.
DigitalChalk, Hunter College and IBM completed a Federal Government Department of Education, National Institute for Disabilities and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) grant to automate translation of audio/video speech to text for web based learning. This project used the speech to text software from IBM Research and the DigitalChalk learning platform to deliver closed captioning to the hard of hearing and cognitive learning disabled. This project was a technical success, according to Dr. David Vandergoot of Hunter College. Business issues remain a sticking point in bringing this technology to market. Hopefully, this solution will be brought to market soon.
Accessibility to Multimedia
Originally posted August 10, 2008
508 STANDARD – Multimedia content on a page must also have accompanying alternative text or a description. For audio, this includes a text transcript or synchronized caption for the audio. The transcript is not a separate file, but part of the page. Captioning helps the deaf or hard of hearing to comprehend the content. The captioning can also help index the page for search engines. The W3C introduced SMIL (Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language). SMIL is a markup language for closed captioning. RealPlayer and others have used the standard to provide manual formation of text for audio captioning.
DigitalChalk, Hunter College and IBM Research have built an automated transcription engine that creates synchronized text for audio and video files. DigitalChalk displays the captioned text and provides a real time editor for adding text for blind viewers of video. This function will be available 4Q2008. This work was the result of a grant from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR).
Accessibility For the Hearing Impaired
Originally Posted April 30, 2008
Being visually impaired, it is difficult for me to clearly understand learning needs by the hearing impaired community. At first, one would think that all hearing impaired are visual learners. One would also think that closed captioning is the only requirement for making a multimedia web site accessible to the hearing impaired.
Today, I spent some time discussing web based learning needs of the hearing impaired with a teacher from the North Carolina School for the Deaf. I learned some very interesting myths about hearing impaired learning needs.
- Closed captioning on a multimedia web site is all that is needed by the hearing impaired. – This is not true. For individuals who have partial hearing loss, closed captioning is very helpful. For individuals who have been totally deaf since birth, English is a second language. For many deaf people, reading English text requires experience in translating to their native language. Sign language is their native language. For web pages with audio and/or video, sign language would be very helpful and would be preferred by some deaf persons.
- All hearing impaired people are visual learners. – This is not true. This is a gross stereotype. Some hearing impaired persons are tactile learners. Some would have naturally been auditory learners. One size does not fit all hearing impaired learners.
- Any certified sign language interpretor can be used to sign a course lesson. – This is not necessarily optimal. A certified sign language interpretor can sign a lesson, but skills of an instructor or teacher would be an added value. Teachers are subject matter experts in what they teach. They are also aware of the language skills of their students. Signing for calculus, or a high level math course, may require different signing skills than that done by a generalist. Signing to grade school students would be different than for high school students. The quality of the signing can make a difference in the learning experience of a hearing impaired student.
Infinity Learning Solutions (ILS) is working with the City University of New York, Hunter College and IBM Research to add automated closed captioning in the DigitalChalk Fall Release. Though this is helpful, we at ILS are committed to adding a capability for audio/video sign language translation as well. Signing would have to be added manually to the audio/video. I hope this will help.