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DIAGRAM Center Overview [revised Feb 11, 2013]. Page 2 Table of Contents ● The Big Idea: slides 3 - 7 ● Who We Are: slides 8 - 10 ● Target Audiences:

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Presentation on theme: "DIAGRAM Center Overview [revised Feb 11, 2013]. Page 2 Table of Contents ● The Big Idea: slides 3 - 7 ● Who We Are: slides 8 - 10 ● Target Audiences:"— Presentation transcript:

1 DIAGRAM Center Overview [revised Feb 11, 2013]

2 Page 2 Table of Contents ● The Big Idea: slides 3 - 7 ● Who We Are: slides 8 - 10 ● Target Audiences: slides 11 – 12 ● What We Do –Outreach & Training: slide 13 –Research: slide 14 - 15 –Software Tools: slides 16 - 24 –Standards: slides 25 - 28 ● Future Plans: slides 29 - 34

3 Page 3 The Big Idea ● DIAGRAM Center = Digital Image And Graphic Resources for Accessible Materials ● Research and development center ● Goal: to dramatically change the way image and graphic content for Accessible Electronic Media (AEM) is produced and accessed, so that students with print disabilities are provided equal access to the general education curriculum.

4 Page 4 Project Impact The DIAGRAM Center has successfully begun the revolution in the accessibility of digital image content ● Why is this critical? –Images not widely available in accessible formats, particularly an issue in STEM –Math equations often represented as images in digital content –Cost of accessibility is high ● Why now? –Text fairly well solved –This is an era of unprecedented change in technology that is impacting education, publishing, and consumer electronics

5 Page 5 The Big Idea: Images are Challenging (especially STEM)

6 Page 6 What is an Accessible Image? ● Provides different mode of access to visual information contained in an image, e.g.: –Text/audio description –Tactile graphic –Sonification –Smart image –Multi-modal access

7 Page 7 DIAGRAM Goals ● Make it easier for content producers to create accessible images ● Make it easier for consumers to use accessible images via technology ● Make it easier for both producers and consumers to discover accessible images and tools ● Make it easier for both to interact with content that need not be stored as traditional images in the first place (e.g., mathematical equations)

8 Page 8 Who We Are: DIAGRAM Center Management

9 Page 9 Who We Are: Advisory Board and Working Groups ● Advisory Board Advisory Board –Technologists –Educators –Publishers –Accessibility experts –Student/Parent reps ● Working Groups Working Groups –Math –Tactile Graphics –Outreach –Content –Tools –Standards

10 Page 10 Together, we are the DIAGRAM Center

11 Page 11 DIAGRAM: Target Audiences

12 Page 12 Evidence of Target Audience Satisfaction ● I'm using it TODAY to get math instructors excited about accessibility resources and creating lab manuals as accessible eBooks! ● One giant leap for accessibility on my campus thanks to the resources that were shared in the DIAGRAM webinar. Thank You!!! ● Timely and significant information. ● Information all parents of kids with special needs should hear. ● DIAGRAM's webinars are filled with excellent, relevant information!

13 Page 13 What We Do: Outreach and Training ● Training Webinars (e.g., 6-week course on Mozilla’s Peer 2 Peer University, EASI) ● Conference Presentations (e.g., CSUN, ATIA, EdTech, TOC) ● One-on-one meetings with constituents of stakeholder groups (e.g., publishers, learning platform providers, assistive technology makers) ● Web site: http://diagramcenter.orghttp://diagramcenter.org ● DIAGRAM Center blog and monthly newsletter at http://blog.diagramcenter.org http://blog.diagramcenter.org ● Twitter @DIAGRAMC, YouTube channel

14 Page 14 What We Do: Research ● DIAGRAM has published: –Product evaluation matricesProduct evaluation matrices –User survey on reading technologiesUser survey on reading technologies –Report on image metadata toolsReport on image metadata tools

15 Page 15 Research: DIAGRAM Subcontracts

16 Page 16 What We Do: Software Tools ● Poet: A Tool for Crowdsourcing Descriptions Poet ● Image Accessibility Coverage Checker for DAISY Books ● Tobi integration: DAISY tool for multi-media production ● DIAGRAM Subcontracts

17 Page 17 Poet: A Tool for Crowdsourcing Descriptions ● Web-based and open source tool for adding image descriptions to e-books (DAISY 3) ● For use by authors, publishers, accessibility providers ● Designed to: –Quickly identify all images in an e-book –Tag images needing descriptions –Author and edit rich descriptions –Provide guidance to describers (guidelines) –Moderate and approve descriptions –Integrate with content production tools

18 Page 18 Poet: Navigate, Contextualize, Describe

19 Page 19 Poet: Math Helper Converts ascii math input into MathML and MathJax

20 Page 20 Poet: Field Testing ● Bookshare actively using Poet to add image descriptions to textbooks ● 30,000+ images described by –Volunteers –Vendors ● Provides user feedback to influence new development ● Also field testing with high school teachers

21 Page 21 Accessible Image Coverage Checker for DAISY Books

22 Page 22 Tobi: Integrating DIAGRAM Standards

23 Page 23 DIAGRAM Tool Development Subcontracts

24 Page 24 Promoting Image Accessibility in Other Tools ● Goal is to provide best practices and advocacy for image accessibility among other tool developers ● Have held exploratory discussions with toolmakers (including publishers, LMS providers, publishing software developers) ● Providing open source reference implementations for the DIAGRAM Content Model

25 Page 25 What We Do: Standards ● Advocacy for image description-related mark up in web and e-book standards –Helped keep @longdesc discussion alive in HTML5Helped keep @longdesc discussion alive in HTML5 –Proposed @describedAt as more robust alternativeProposed @describedAt as more robust alternative –Working with EPUB 3, ARIA, HTML5, and others ● DIAGRAM Content Model: DIAGRAM Content Model –Framework for accessible image metadata –Standard means that we can share metadata about images across systems –Groundwork for giving individuals different ways of getting information from the same image –Framework approved by NISO in August 2012

26 Page 26 Standards: DIAGRAM Content Model ● XML data model for image metadata ● For any given image you can have: –multiple types of descriptions (e.g., short, long, simplified etc.) –alternative image links (e.g., SVG) –other image metadata (e.g., target age, grade level, etc.)

27 Page 27 Example: The Hydrologic Cycle

28 Page 28 Standards: Content Model Example About this description Author: John Doe, Ph.D. in Water Engineering Target Age: 9-12 Target Grade: 4-7 Summary The image depicts the cycle of water evaporating, turning into clouds, falling back to earth in the form of precipitation and being filtered through sediment. Long Description The image depicts the natural process of evaporation and precipitation and how rain water gets filtered and cleansed through the earth's sediment. On the left-hand side of the image is a lake... A weather event such as a rainstorm eventually returns the precipitation to the ground... The natural filtering agents in the soil... Annotation added by teacher In the winter we get snow instead of rain. Simplified Language Description The image shows how water becomes clouds, then rain, and then gets cleaned by the soil. Tactile Image [Tactile image] In the upper left corner of the tactile… Simplified Image [Simplified image] Moving front the top left corner of the image

29 Page 29 Future Plans: Aligned with User-Centered DIAGRAM Goals ● Make it easier for content producers to create accessible images ● Make it easier for consumers to use accessible images via technology ● Make it easier for both producers and consumers to discover accessible images and tools ● Make it easier for both to interact with content that need not be stored as traditional images in the first place (e.g., mathematical equations)

30 Page 30 Future Plans: Outreach, Training, Piloting Goals These goals address how we make it easier to create and use accessible images by spreading the word about how and why to use DIAGRAM tools and best practices. End-to-end piloting … so everyone gets how we’re improving the process Library of training videos and demos… so everyone has easy access to our info Reach out to authoring software tool makers … so tools already in use also create accessible images Field testing and piloting… so we’re delivering quality software Clear articulation of goals, mission, and benefits… so we can inform and inspire

31 Page 31 Future Plans: More Collaboration ● Numerous Partnerships proposed –ETS –Smith-Kettlewell Eye Institute ● “Born Accessible” and Inclusive Publishing ● International opportunities ● DIAGRAM’s sphere of influence continues to grow ● More work to be done!

32 Page 32 Future Plans: Content Goals These goals address how we make it easier to create accessible images by demonstrating clear examples, and how we make it easier to discover accessible images by providing a way to search for them. Create sample accessible image book… so others have tangible examples Design image library with some cleared licensing… so people have access to accessible images Explore Learning Registry for searching images across multiple libraries… so we make it easier to find accessible images Understand the content workflow… so we identify addressable gaps in the process and fill them

33 Page 33 Future Plans: Tools Goals These goals address how we make it easier to create, discover, use, and interact with accessible images by developing new tools to do each, especially for emerging modes and formats across broad bodies of content. Reference implementations… so tools builders and content creators know what works Support for interactive accessible image widgets… so we can inspire more smart image creation Enhance accessible math navigation and explore math manipulation… so students can work better with math content Accessible Image Coverage checker for EPUB3… so content creators can tell if they are creating accessible materials

34 Page 34 Future Plans: Standards Goals These goals address how we make it easier to create, use, discover and interact with accessible images by providing the framework for building authoring and reading tools, and exchanging data so images can be shared. IDPF representation… so we can effectively advocate for accessible ebook standards Monitor HTML5 but spend more time on other learning standards … so we make sure accessible images are in all educational content Content model support for alternative, multi-modal image representations… so we can facilitate as many modes as possible Multi-modal, smart image standards… so we can advocate and demonstrate good models

35 Page 35 Thank You [Your name] [Your contact info]


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