Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
The travails of visually impaired web travellers
HYPERTEXT '00 Proceedings of the eleventh ACM on Hypertext and hypermedia
Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies
Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies
Designing With Web Standards
Placing links in mobile banking application
Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices & services
The Design of Everyday Things
A web design framework for improved accessibility for people with disabilities (WDFAD)
W4A '08 Proceedings of the 2008 international cross-disciplinary conference on Web accessibility (W4A)
Investigating sighted users' browsing behaviour to assist web accessibility
Proceedings of the 10th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility
Web Design Requirements for Improved Web Accessibility for the Blind
ICHL '08 Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Hybrid Learning and Education
Analysis of navigation behaviour of blind users using Browsing Shortcuts
The New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia - Web Accessibility
Toward a definition of visual complexity as an implicit measure of cognitive load
ACM Transactions on Applied Perception (TAP)
Bells, whistles, and alarms: HCI lessons using AJAX for a page-turning web application
CHI '11 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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At its most basic, the web allows for two modes of access: visual and non-visual. For the most part, our design attention is focused on making decisions that affect the visual, or surface, layer --- colors and type, screen dimensions, fixed or flexible layouts. However, much of the power of the technology lies beneath the surface, in the underlying code of the page. There, in the unseen depths of the page code, we make decisions that influence how well, or poorly, our pages are read and interpreted by software. In this paper, we shift our attention beneath the surface of the web and focus on design decisions that affect nonvisual access to web pages.