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“Customization is Key”: Reconfigurable Textual Tokens for Accessible Data Visualizations

Shuli Jones, Isabella Pedraza Pineros, Daniel Hajas, Jonathan Zong, Arvind Satyanarayan

202412 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Customization is crucial for making visualizations accessible to blind and low-vision (BLV) people with widely-varying needs. But what makes for usable or useful customization? We identify four design goals for how BLV people should be able to customize screen-reader-accessible visualizations: presence, or what content is included; verbosity, or how concisely content is presented; ordering, or how content is sequenced; and, duration, or how long customizations are active. To meet these goals, we model a customization as a sequence of content tokens, each with a set of adjustable properties. We instantiate our model by extending Olli, an open-source accessible visualization toolkit, with a settings menu and command box for persistent and ephemeral customization respectively. Through a study with 13 BLV participants, we find that customization increases the ease of identifying and remembering information. However, customization also introduces additional complexity, making it more helpful for users familiar with similar tools.

Topics & Concepts

PersonalizationUSableComputer scienceVisualizationKey (lock)World Wide WebSet (abstract data type)Human–computer interactionMultimediaProgramming languageOperating systemData miningData Visualization and AnalyticsDigital Accessibility for DisabilitiesMultimedia Communication and Technology
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