Rich Screen Reader Experiences for Accessible Data Visualization
Jonathan Zong, Crystal Lee, Alan Lundgard, JiWoong Jang, Daniel Hajas,, Arvind Satyanarayan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a set of rich, interactive screen reader experiences for accessible data visualization, enabling blind and low vision users to explore and analyze data more effectively than with basic alternatives.
Contribution
It proposes a novel framework with three key design dimensions for expressive screen reader accessibility and demonstrates their effectiveness through prototypes and user studies.
Findings
Users can conceptualize data spatially using the new designs.
Designs enable selective attention to data at various granularities.
Participants experienced increased control and agency in data analysis.
Abstract
Current web accessibility guidelines ask visualization designers to support screen readers via basic non-visual alternatives like textual descriptions and access to raw data tables. But charts do more than summarize data or reproduce tables; they afford interactive data exploration at varying levels of granularity -- from fine-grained datum-by-datum reading to skimming and surfacing high-level trends. In response to the lack of comparable non-visual affordances, we present a set of rich screen reader experiences for accessible data visualization and exploration. Through an iterative co-design process, we identify three key design dimensions for expressive screen reader accessibility: structure, or how chart entities should be organized for a screen reader to traverse; navigation, or the structural, spatial, and targeted operations a user might perform to step through the structure; and,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Accessibility for Disabilities · Tactile and Sensory Interactions · Text Readability and Simplification
