MPEG-H Audio for Improving Accessibility in Broadcasting and Streaming
Christian Simon, Matteo Torcoli, Jouni Paulus

TL;DR
This paper discusses how MPEG-H Object-Based Audio enhances accessibility in broadcasting and streaming by enabling flexible, easy-to-implement features like dialog enhancement and audio description, thereby reducing barriers for diverse audiences.
Contribution
It demonstrates the practical application of MPEG-H Audio as an accessible object-based audio system with simple integration into existing workflows.
Findings
MPEG-H Audio enables improved accessibility features like dialog enhancement.
Object-based audio allows flexible accessibility options with minimal workflow changes.
Deployment of MPEG-H Audio can significantly reduce accessibility barriers in broadcasting.
Abstract
Broadcasting and streaming services still suffer from various levels of accessibility barriers for a significant portion of the population, limiting the access to information and culture, and in the most severe cases limiting the empowerment of people. This paper provides a brief overview of some of the most common accessibility barriers encountered. It then gives a short introduction to object-based audio (OBA) production and transport, focusing on the aspects relevant for lowering accessibility barriers. MPEG-H Audio is used as a concrete example of an OBA system already deployed. Two example cases (dialog enhancement and audio description) are used to demonstrate in detail the simplicity of producing MPEG-H Audio content providing improved accessibility. Several other possibilities are outlined briefly. We show that using OBA for broadcasting and streaming content allows offering…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSubtitles and Audiovisual Media · Multimedia Communication and Technology · Speech and Audio Processing
