Title
"With most of it being pictures now, I rarely use it": Understanding Twitter's Evolving Accessibility to Blind Users.
Abstract
Social media is an increasingly important part of modern life. We investigate the use of and usability of Twitter by blind users, via a combination of surveys of blind Twitter users, large-scale analysis of tweets from and Twitter profiles of blind and sighted users, and analysis of tweets containing embedded imagery. While Twitter has traditionally been thought of as the most accessible social media platform for blind users, Twitter's increasing integration of image content and users' diverse uses for images have presented emergent accessibility challenges. Our findings illuminate the importance of the ability to use social media for people who are blind, while also highlighting the many challenges such media currently present this user base, including difficulty in creating profiles, in awareness of available features and settings, in controlling revelations of one's disability status, and in dealing with the increasing pervasiveness of image-based content. We propose changes that Twitter and other social platforms should make to promote fuller access to users with visual impairments.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1145/2858036.2858116
CHI
Keywords
Field
DocType
Social media, Twitter, blindness, accessibility
World Wide Web,Internet privacy,Social media,Computer science,Usability,Image content,Blindness,Multimedia
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
19
0.78
16
Authors
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Meredith Ringel Morris15465362.85
Annuska Zolyomi2273.97
Catherine Yao3190.78
Sina Bahram420310.40
jeffrey p bigham52647189.29
Shaun Kane6143792.67