Difference between revisions of "Auditory content reproduction"

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{{Website
 
{{Website
 
|headline=AuditoryContentReproduction
 
|headline=AuditoryContentReproduction
|coordhead=322.447, 296.379, 0.000
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|coordhead=317.000, 296.379, 0.000
|image1=img/img.link
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|image1=/wiki/images/AuditoryContentReproduction.png
 
|coordimg1=0, 0, 0
 
|coordimg1=0, 0, 0
|simploduction=<li><ul>This section is about feedback that you can hear.</ul><ul>Sound can add a layer of information.</ul><ul>Sound feedback can be of help for some people.</ul><ul>Sound can be distracting to some peolpe, so it is good when you can turn it off.</ul></li>
+
|simploduction=<ul>
 +
<li>How to deal with information that you can hear.</li>
 +
<li>Whenever sound is used to communicate information, visible alternatives should be provided.</li>
 +
<li>These alternatives could be subtitles, transcripts or sign language.</li></ul>
 
|coordsimplo=0, 0, 0
 
|coordsimplo=0, 0, 0
|testimonial=Some person has witnessed the whole shabang. So here is a story about it. It wasnt nice. Thats why you will have to do better. To make it nice. So that the whole shabang doesnt exclued the person again.
+
|testimonial=
 +
62-year old Martine has been hard of hearing since birth. She knows sign language and can read, but doesn’t understand speech.
 +
Because of the disability accommodations that many colleges now offer, Martine is currently a student again, taking online college courses.
 +
For her online courses, video and other media content are of no use to her, if they don’t contain captions. When media is captioned, audio is converted to text, so Martine can read it.
 +
Transcripts (written versions of the entire audio or video content) are helpful to Martine too. She can print the transcripts and use them to study or view them on the go from her mobile phone.
 +
Ironically, the university has found that these measures have also benefited students without disabilities, and improved their search engine rankings.
 +
<a href="https://accessly.io/website-accessiblity-truth-how-people-with-disabilities-use-websites/">Source</a>
 
|coordtesti=0, 0, 0
 
|coordtesti=0, 0, 0
 
|belongsto=Hearing
 
|belongsto=Hearing
|contains=subtitles, transcripts, sign_language
+
|contains=Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References
 
}}
 
}}
==header==
 
=[[subtitles]]=
 
=[[transcripts]]=
 
=[[sign_language]]=
 
  
==simple introduction==
+
__TOC__
* This section is about information in sound.
 
* Whenever you use sound to communicate information you need to give other, visible options for it.
 
* These options could be subtitles, transcripts or sign language.
 
* If you do not give visual options for information communicated by sound, people will be excluded.
 
  
==testimonial==
+
[[File:AuditoryContentReproduction.png|400px|none|Illustration Auditory Content Reproduction]]
Some person has witnessed the whole shabang. So here is a story about it. It wasnt nice. Thats why you will have to do better. To make it nice. So that the whole shabang doesnt exclued the person again.
+
<div class="text_content">
 +
==Overview==
 +
* How to deal with information that you can hear.
 +
* Whenever sound is used to communicate information, visible alternatives should be provided.
 +
* These alternatives could be subtitles, transcripts or sign language.
 +
 
 +
==User story==
 +
62-year old Martine has been hard of hearing since birth. She knows sign language and can read, but doesn’t understand speech.
 +
Because of the disability accommodations that many colleges now offer, Martine is currently a student again, taking online college courses.
 +
For her online courses, video and other media content are of no use to her, if they don’t contain captions. When media is captioned, audio is converted to text, so Martine can read it.
 +
Transcripts (written versions of the entire audio or video content) are helpful to Martine too. She can print the transcripts and use them to study or view them on the go from her mobile phone.
 +
Ironically, the university has found that these measures have also benefited students without disabilities, and improved their search engine rankings.
 +
 
 +
Source: https://accessly.io/website-accessiblity-truth-how-people-with-disabilities-use-websites/
 +
 
 +
==[[Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References|Reference Collections for Auditory Content Reproduction]]==
 +
===[[Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References#General|general]]===
 +
===[[Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References#Subtitles|subtitles]]===
 +
===[[Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References#Sign_Language|sign language]]===
 +
===[[Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References#Transcripts|transcripts]]===
 +
</div>

Latest revision as of 11:53, 4 June 2021

headline AuditoryContentReproduction
headline coordinates 317.000, 296.379, 0.000
image /wiki/images/AuditoryContentReproduction.png
image coordinates 0, 0, 0
simple introduction
  • How to deal with information that you can hear.
  • Whenever sound is used to communicate information, visible alternatives should be provided.
  • These alternatives could be subtitles, transcripts or sign language.
simple introduction coordinates 0, 0, 0
testimonial 62-year old Martine has been hard of hearing since birth. She knows sign language and can read, but doesn’t understand speech.

Because of the disability accommodations that many colleges now offer, Martine is currently a student again, taking online college courses. For her online courses, video and other media content are of no use to her, if they don’t contain captions. When media is captioned, audio is converted to text, so Martine can read it. Transcripts (written versions of the entire audio or video content) are helpful to Martine too. She can print the transcripts and use them to study or view them on the go from her mobile phone. Ironically, the university has found that these measures have also benefited students without disabilities, and improved their search engine rankings. <a href="https://accessly.io/website-accessiblity-truth-how-people-with-disabilities-use-websites/">Source</a>

testimonial coordinates 0, 0, 0
links to
belongs to Hearing
contains Auditory_Content_Reproduction_References


Illustration Auditory Content Reproduction

Overview[edit]

  • How to deal with information that you can hear.
  • Whenever sound is used to communicate information, visible alternatives should be provided.
  • These alternatives could be subtitles, transcripts or sign language.

User story[edit]

62-year old Martine has been hard of hearing since birth. She knows sign language and can read, but doesn’t understand speech. Because of the disability accommodations that many colleges now offer, Martine is currently a student again, taking online college courses. For her online courses, video and other media content are of no use to her, if they don’t contain captions. When media is captioned, audio is converted to text, so Martine can read it. Transcripts (written versions of the entire audio or video content) are helpful to Martine too. She can print the transcripts and use them to study or view them on the go from her mobile phone. Ironically, the university has found that these measures have also benefited students without disabilities, and improved their search engine rankings.

Source: https://accessly.io/website-accessiblity-truth-how-people-with-disabilities-use-websites/

Reference Collections for Auditory Content Reproduction[edit]

general[edit]

subtitles[edit]

sign language[edit]

transcripts[edit]