This document provides an introduction to web accessibility. It defines web accessibility as enabling the web so that everyone can access its content when they want to and how they need to. The document discusses why web accessibility is important for knowledge sharing, interaction, commerce and social inclusion. It also notes that web accessibility is important for profit and required by law. The document then covers who influences web accessibility and common issues with building accessible sites. It focuses on cognitive impairments, defining them and discussing common difficulties users face and potential solutions to aid comprehension. It raises the challenge of incorporating all accessibility needs into one website.
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"ecentricarts
Our in-house ecentricarts Accessibility Team (known as EAT) has compiled a ton of resources to help you understand the ins and outs of web accessibility. This includes: why it matters, who it impacts, common misconceptions, a beginner's guide to WCAG 2.0 and accessibility legislation, and how you can test, design, develop, and create more accessible websites.
This presentation also includes examples of before/after screenreader demos, and our 2017 company video made with described audio.
Why I Hate The Interweb - Kath Moonan at Scripting EnabledChristian Heilmann
Kath Moonan's presentation at Scripting Enabled in London, September 2008. She covers the outcome of research done by Abilitynet with people with visual impairments and web sites.
A Step Toward Creating ADA Compliant Course Sites, presented by Wilmington Un...Wilmington University
Dana Gullo, Instructional Designer at Wilmington University, http://wilmu.edu/online, shares how to create ADA Compliant Course Sites. Learn simple ways on how you can transform your courses to be more ADA compliant. Explore areas such as creating accessible PDF documents, appropriate font, style, and color choices, video captioning, and graphics considerations.
These Instructional Design tips are especially helpful for the visually impaired and hard of hearing student in your online course.
This presentation was first shared at the 2016 Northeast E-learning Consortium, view additional archived presentations at this link: http://northeastelearning.org/2016-archives/
Learn about the basics of web accessibility: what it is, who it affects, why it matters, and some of the fundamental things you ought to be doing in your pages to make them more accessible.
Tabaruk diambil dari kata berkah, yang substansinya adalah bertambah dan berkembang.
Tabaruk adalah mencari tambahan dan perkembangan dari sesuatu yang menjadi sarana tabaruk.
This presentation will help you understand:
- The legal requirements behind Web Accessibility
- How do people with disabilities use the web and what assistive technologies they use
- How good usability makes up for better accessibility and improves site’ SEO
- Financial benefits of having an accessible website
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"ecentricarts
Our in-house ecentricarts Accessibility Team (known as EAT) has compiled a ton of resources to help you understand the ins and outs of web accessibility. This includes: why it matters, who it impacts, common misconceptions, a beginner's guide to WCAG 2.0 and accessibility legislation, and how you can test, design, develop, and create more accessible websites.
This presentation also includes examples of before/after screenreader demos, and our 2017 company video made with described audio.
Why I Hate The Interweb - Kath Moonan at Scripting EnabledChristian Heilmann
Kath Moonan's presentation at Scripting Enabled in London, September 2008. She covers the outcome of research done by Abilitynet with people with visual impairments and web sites.
A Step Toward Creating ADA Compliant Course Sites, presented by Wilmington Un...Wilmington University
Dana Gullo, Instructional Designer at Wilmington University, http://wilmu.edu/online, shares how to create ADA Compliant Course Sites. Learn simple ways on how you can transform your courses to be more ADA compliant. Explore areas such as creating accessible PDF documents, appropriate font, style, and color choices, video captioning, and graphics considerations.
These Instructional Design tips are especially helpful for the visually impaired and hard of hearing student in your online course.
This presentation was first shared at the 2016 Northeast E-learning Consortium, view additional archived presentations at this link: http://northeastelearning.org/2016-archives/
Learn about the basics of web accessibility: what it is, who it affects, why it matters, and some of the fundamental things you ought to be doing in your pages to make them more accessible.
Tabaruk diambil dari kata berkah, yang substansinya adalah bertambah dan berkembang.
Tabaruk adalah mencari tambahan dan perkembangan dari sesuatu yang menjadi sarana tabaruk.
This presentation will help you understand:
- The legal requirements behind Web Accessibility
- How do people with disabilities use the web and what assistive technologies they use
- How good usability makes up for better accessibility and improves site’ SEO
- Financial benefits of having an accessible website
Three things for an accessibility help page - AbilityNet Webinar, 25 Septembe...AbilityNet
Accessibility pages help people use your site and show a commitment to meeting your customers' needs. So what should they say? Join our next Accessibility webinar to hear AbilityNet's Head of Digital Inclusion Robin Christopherson explain the three key ingredients that every accessibility page needs.
Robin Christopherson, Head of Digital Inclusion, AbilityNetThree things to put in your accessibility help page
These are slides from a webinar delivered on Wednesday 25 September 2013
Robin will review the reasons for providing an accessibility help page and look at three things every page should include:
a compliance statement
links to relevant assistive technologies
a feedback channel.
Meetup 57 on July 8, 2014 at The Marquee at Sheridan College, Oakville, Ontario, Canada. Presented on The Accessibility for Ontarians With Disabilities Act (AODA).
The Benefits Of Website Accessibility
1. Increased market share
2. Findability and SEO
3. Better public image
Some of the content includes:
- who is accessibility for (not just the physically handicapped)
- Web accessibility requirements and penalties
- business case for Web accessibility
- intuitive and accessible structure
- writing for accessibility
- how accessibility, good usability and SEO tie in
- design elements to be aware of (font sizes, colours, links)
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What is accessible computing, How people with disabilities use digital services, Various accessibility standards and guidelines,Important laws,Web accessibility,Non HTML content accessibility, Why to invest in web accessibility, Key principles of web accessibility, Accessibility myths, Approaches for accessibility implementation
The aim of this presentation is to introduce the concept of accessibility, and will cover what is meant by being accessible, why it’s important, who is affected, and how you can incorporate accessibility into your design, development and planning. There will be particular focus on the practical aspects of testing for accessibility.
With increased complaints and legal action for organisations of inaccessible websites (Coles, Peapod) and apps (Westpac), now is the time for all web and app Project Managers, Developers, UX/Designers, Content Producers, Business Analysts and Testers to be ‘baking in’ accessibility into processes and work practices.
This presentation will show that accessibility is everyone’s responsibility and it is not difficult to get started or find resources that will help you and your team produce a website, app or digital presence that works for everyone!
Trying to get clients or stakeholders to see the need for accessibility is hard, people still see it as alot of extra work with rewards that are hard to provide a ROI. However web spiders/crawlers are our biggest blind user on the web, in essence alot of what works to increase SEO will increase the accessibility of your site. Lets take a look at some site building and development tasks we can perform that provide a tick to SEO and a tick to Accessibility. If we can take this approach we can see that the cost of Accessibility is actually bundled with the cost of SEO and not an additional burden to the project.
This talk looks at the state of accessibility in Joomla and shows how accessibility is intrinsically linked to SEO performance from a development perspective. We will also look at some new tools to help check and test for accessibility throughout the development process, and how we can add these into a CI/CD approach.
Whilst this talk is aimed at all audiences it will be focused on development and management of the development process. With time permitting and depending on the audience questions/experience level there may be some tech demos utilised to help illustrate concepts.
*All accessibility guideline discussions will be based on Australian Government Standards http://www.australia.gov.au/accessibility
Trying to get clients or stakeholders to see the need for accessibility is hard, people still see it as alot of extra work with rewards that are hard to provide a ROI. However web spiders/crawlers are our biggest blind user on the web, in essence alot of what works to increase SEO will increase the accessibility of your site. Lets take a look at some site building and development tasks we can perform that provide a tick to SEO and a tick to Accessibility. If we can take this approach we can see that the cost of Accessibility is actually bundled with the cost of SEO and not an additional burden to the project.
Profitability of Accessibility WordPress Accessibility Day 2020Sumner M. Davenport
Can creating or remediating WordPress sites to include Accessibility increase clients and web designers profits?
Can you measure how much money businesses are losing out on because of a non-Accessible website?
Can profits be lost by designers who are not including Accessibility in their services?
The answer to all of the above is “Yes.”
Useful Accessibility Tools Version 3 - Jul 2021Graham Armfield
A collection of tools used to check websites for accessibility, and it some cases improve the accessibility of a website. All the tools are free, so have a go.
So how do i know if my wordpress website is accessible - WordPress Accessibil...Graham Armfield
Testing websites for accessibility can be a daunting undertaking if it's not something you're familiar with. The WCAG 2.1 accessibility guidelines can be hard to follow. But actually, many aspects of digital accessibility are not that complicated.
In this talk I move away from the impenetrable guidelines, and introduce a simpler series of yes/no questions that anyone can answer about their own website. In the time available it can't cover every single potential accessibility problem, but instead I focus on some of the most common, and most serious accessibility issues that I've found when reviewing websites. Where possible, I'll also talk about how you can fix any issues founds.
A look at some useful accessibility tools.
These tools help test websites for accessibility, and there are a couple of WordPress plugins that can help improve a website's accessibility.
Revised version of my presentation - first delivered to WordCamp Manchester in 2019.
Presentation looks at some small tweaks to HTML and CSS that can make your site a little more accessible.
Covers: SVG images, screen reader text, some CSS to help when building your web templates/themes, and some CSS that can help show your content authors where they may have made some accessibility mistakes.
Useful Accessibility Tools - WP Pompey April 2019Graham Armfield
Updated version of my presentation showing some useful tools people can use to test out the accessibility of their site.
The tools range from hardware - ie using a keyboard, through browser extensions and favlets, to a couple of WordPress plugins that can help improve the accessibility of a WordPress website.
Some of the tools can also be used by those with disabilities or impairments to more easily access and deal with websites that are not fully accessible.
In an era where the number of web accessibility legal actions is growing rapidly, it's important that those who build websites do what they can to make their websites accessible. Good accessibility also brings in more potential customers for your products or services - which is good for any business.
This presentation looks at some simple tricks and techniques to improve accessibility that can be incorporated when you're building a WordPress theme - either for yourself or for a client.
It also has a section on what to tell content authors and editors so that they don't mess up the accessibility of the website once you've built it.
Accessibility Hacks Wordcamp Manchester October 2018Graham Armfield
A bunch of small accessibility tweaks that WordPress theme builders can make to improve the accessibility of their products.
Contains a section on making SVG files accessible to screen reader users. And then some CSS techniques that can help trap accessibility gotchas when building themes, and for content authors when they preview posts or pages.
Some useful accessibility tools to help test your site and development environment for accessibility, and can also potentially improve the accessibility of your website.
The slides that go with my Assistive Technology Demo as given to WordCamp Bristol on 13th May 2017.
I demo Dragon NaturallySpeaking - voice recognition software, and NVDA - a screen reader.
The slides introduce the demo - and contain a few of the common commands for each of the two pieces of software demoed.
Designing for Accessibility - WordCamp London 2017Graham Armfield
An updated and expanded version of this presentation that looks at how design decisions can affect the accessibility of a website.
Subjects covered:
- Use of colour, and colour contrast
- Catering for keyboard users
- Text and Content
- Placeholders and forms
Designing for Accessibility - Front End North - September 2016Graham Armfield
A lightning talk on Designing for Accessibility. A look at the accessibility implications of some common design patterns. Featuring:
- Colour contrast
- Using colour to convey meaning
- Text justification
- Placeholders
Obscure Wordpress Functions That Are Actually Quite UsefulGraham Armfield
Slides from a lightning talk delivered to WordPress London Meetup Group on 25th Feb 2016.
The presentation runs through some WordPress functions that I've found useful whilst building themes.
Themes Plugins and Accessibility - WordCamp London March 2015Graham Armfield
WordPress is used by over 20% of the world's websites. But how many accessible themes are there in the WordPress theme repository?
The answer is, "not many".
This presentation tries to demystify the recently introduced accessibility-ready tag within the theme review process. It's a tag that WordPress theme authors can use to indicate that their theme has good accessibility features. It's actually not that hard to achieve, and the web will be a better place if there were more accessibility-ready themes for people to choose from.
I also look at the impact WordCamp plugins can have on accessibility, and talk about whether the accessibility-ready principles could be used by plugin authors. The short answer, is that yes they can be useful.
Can WordPress help make the web more accessible - eaccess15 - Feb 2015Graham Armfield
WordPress is a CMS that now powers over 20% of the world's websites.
But how easy is it to create an accessible website using WordPress? What is there to help you, and what are the pitfalls?
And if you want to help make WordPress more accessible, there's a team of volunteers who would love to talk to you. Come and join in at: https://make.wordpress.org/accessibility/get-involved-1/
This slide deck formed the basis of a round table discussion that I chaired at eAccess15 in London on 24th March 2015.
There are over 2000 WordPress themes available on the WordPress theme repositiry. But only a small number are fully accessible.
Yet the accessibility guidelines available in the WordPress codex aren't hard to follow. And there is a new 'accessibility ready' tag that can be applied to themes that pass the extra accessibility test carried out when themes are reviewed.
This presentation looks at the accessibility part of the WordPress theme review process and describes what needs to be done to help a theme pass the test.
Even if you're not creating themes for the WordPress repository, but just creating them for your own website, or for a client, this presentation could be useful.
Wordpress and Web Accessibility Wordcamp UK 2014Graham Armfield
WordPress accessibility is improving, with some real strides over the last year. But is it changing fast enough?
This presentation covers some of the improvements that have been made with WordPress themes, and in the admin area. But I also cover some things that shouldn't have happened, and where we can learn from mistakes.
I also present my view of where WordPress should go next with accessibility.
Presentation delivered to ISTC (Institute of Scientific and Technical Communicators) Southern Area Group on May 13th 2014.
The presentation is an introduction to using WordPress, and how it can work for you if you need a website, for your business or your own personal blog.
I cover a bit about the history of WordPress, how it works, adding content, getting a WordPress website, and general maintenance when you've got one.
So How Do I Know if My Website is Accessible?Graham Armfield
Presentation I delivered on Global Accessibility Awareness Day - May 15th 2014. It was delivered as part of Inclusive Design 24 - 24 hours of accessibility webinars. The event was sponsored by the Paciello Group and Adobe.
The presentation is aimed at developers and website administrators who may have heard about accessibility, but who'd like to learn more.
It sets out a series of yes/no questions that anyone can answer about their own websites - using simple techniques and a couple of useful tools that you can download.
The presentation doesn't cover all aspects of web accessibility, but if you can answer these questions correctly about your website, then it's going to be more accessible than many.
Running a listing or job board site can be a great experience and generate ad revenue. But you don't really want to add all the listings in yourself - that can be a lot of work.
So why not get your site visitors to add it for you, but without having to give them all a WordPress login.
This presentation focuses on the key techniques you can use to accept user generated content via a form on your WordPress website. You can use these techniques in many different ways, eg: for gig listings, general events, classified ads, job boards, company profiles, etc.
ARENA - Young adults in the workplace (Knight Moves).pdfKnight Moves
Presentations of Bavo Raeymaekers (Project lead youth unemployment at the City of Antwerp), Suzan Martens (Service designer at Knight Moves) and Adriaan De Keersmaeker (Community manager at Talk to C)
during the 'Arena • Young adults in the workplace' conference hosted by Knight Moves.
Between Filth and Fortune- Urban Cattle Foraging Realities by Devi S Nair, An...Mansi Shah
This study examines cattle rearing in urban and rural settings, focusing on milk production and consumption. By exploring a case in Ahmedabad, it highlights the challenges and processes in dairy farming across different environments, emphasising the need for sustainable practices and the essential role of milk in daily consumption.
Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
White wonder, Work developed by Eva TschoppMansi Shah
White Wonder by Eva Tschopp
A tale about our culture around the use of fertilizers and pesticides visiting small farms around Ahmedabad in Matar and Shilaj.
Technoblade The Legacy of a Minecraft Legend.Techno Merch
Technoblade, born Alex on June 1, 1999, was a legendary Minecraft YouTuber known for his sharp wit and exceptional PvP skills. Starting his channel in 2013, he gained nearly 11 million subscribers. His private battle with metastatic sarcoma ended in June 2022, but his enduring legacy continues to inspire millions.
Fonts play a crucial role in both User Interface (UI) and User Experience (UX) design. They affect readability, accessibility, aesthetics, and overall user perception.
PDF SubmissionDigital Marketing Institute in NoidaPoojaSaini954651
https://www.safalta.com/online-digital-marketing/advance-digital-marketing-training-in-noidaTop Digital Marketing Institute in Noida: Boost Your Career Fast
[3:29 am, 30/05/2024] +91 83818 43552: Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida also provides advanced classes for individuals seeking to develop their expertise and skills in this field. These classes, led by industry experts with vast experience, focus on specific aspects of digital marketing such as advanced SEO strategies, sophisticated content creation techniques, and data-driven analytics.
Visual Style and Aesthetics: Basics of Visual Design
Visual Design for Enterprise Applications
Range of Visual Styles.
Mobile Interfaces:
Challenges and Opportunities of Mobile Design
Approach to Mobile Design
Patterns
2. Introduction to web accessibility Graham Armfield Who am I? Web developer Accessibility consultant Accessibility tester Fix the Web partner
3. What this presentation will cover What does web accessibility mean? Why web accessibility is important? Who can deliver web accessibility and how? Types of disability Cognitive impairment What that means Difficulties faced with websites Some solutions for websites Providing accessible versions for all?
4. What is web accessibility? What does it mean to the population at large? Do you only know if it affects you? One definition: “Enabling the web so that everyone can access its content when they want to and how they need to”
5. Why is web accessibility important? The web is for knowledge The web is for interaction The web is for commerce Increasingly the world’s preferred channel
6. Web accessibility and social inclusion Web should be for everyone Sharing of ideas/concepts Having fun Wanting to belong
7. Web accessibility and profit The web is increasingly businesses’ preferred channel Financial savings Banking transactions, e-statements eCommerce - eg Amazon, eBay Engaging users in online solutions But are businesses engaging or coercing?
8. Web accessibility – the reality Not everyone’s preferred channel To some it’s a barrier Poorly designed website and web applications People’s abilities taken for granted Businesses have a responsibility to make their online offerings accessible.
9. Some statistics Approx. 10 million people in the UK are officially viewed as disabled. The disabled represent a market worth £80bn per year 7 million people in UK have some form of literacy problem 52% of those who meet legal definition of disability prefer not to describe themselves that way. Elderly – half of Japan’s population is over 50 UK 15 million over 55 People aged 50+ have combined annual income of more than £160bn
10. Web accessibility can increase profit Because it makes financial sense Tesco – Redesigned site including accessible version yielded £1.6m extra turnover a year from disabled people for a cost of £35k If a company’s website is hard to use, people will visit a competitor’s site which is easier to use. Why shut out revenue?
11. Web accessibility is the law Equality Act 2010 (DDA in N Ireland) Laws specifically refer to websites Why web accessibility… The question surely is: “Why isn’t web accessibility important to more people?”
16. Types of Impairment Visual impairments Hearing impairments Motor impairments Epilepsy Ageing-related impairments Cognitive impairments
17. Cognitive Impairment – Theme of Accessibility London 2011 Why chosen? Maybe a little overlooked Maybe not as well understood Needs and challenges can be very diverse What does it mean? - One definition: “Something which affects the ability to think, concentrate, formulate ideas, reason and remember. It is distinct from a learning disability insofar as it may have been acquired later in life as a result of an accident or illness.”
18. Some types of cognitive impairment Language based difficulties - eg Dyslexia Intellectual difficulties Autism ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder) Most cognitive disabilities have some sort of basis in the biology or physiology of the individual
19. Cognitive Impairment Common difficulties that people experience Memory difficulties Solving problems – can be easily put off Attention – can be easily distracted Reading and linguistic comprehension Maths comprehension Visual Comprehension Often there may be an overlap of conditions
20. Cognitive Impairment Common difficulties experienced with websites Language too complex Insufficient instructions Page styling – font size, justification, contrast Inconsistent page layout or navigation Non-logical tab order Sites that change frequently – eg Facebook Scrolling and blinking content , popup panels and windows Embedded functionality – eg media players, flash Use of icons – eg on media players For some people any content may be too complicated
21. Cognitive Impairment Needs and solutions (a selection) Present content in small chunks – one idea per paragraph Use bullet lists rather than long sentences Provide meaningful signposts – headings and summaries Design for optimum line lengths – about 12 words (around 500px) Use larger fonts, increased line height and white space separation Include overt hover/focus highlight on links Hover highlight on paragraphs Too much background white – offer reversed/alternate colours Videos rather than still images may aid understanding Not all in WCAG2.0
22. How can all accessibility needs be incorporated into one website? Some solutions are not popular with other users Alternate versions Switching Parallel with mobile
23. Cognitive impairment Resources ( a small selection) Juicy Studio (from 2005) http://juicystudio.com/article/cognitive-impairment.php WebAIM – Cognitive Disabilities http://webaim.org/articles/cognitive/ Wave - Cognitive Accessibility Checklist http://wave.webaim.org/cognitive
24. A side effect Making a website easier for those with cognitive impairments can make a website easier for everyone to use… …but not always
Used to work for large financial organisationBuilding accessible sitesAdvising and training others in accessibilityTesting or auditing accessibilityBut left and formed my own company
Limited time so brief consideration for each
Maybe a problem with your internet connection?Do people with disabilities actually call it that?Do you only know the term ‘web accessibility’ if you have a disability or it’s part of your work?
Maybe idealistic Should be for everyoneSharing of ideasHaving fun with games or communicationBut everyone likes to belong
Less reliance on costly human interactionEye on the bottom line
Assumptions made about about people’s abilitiesDesigned for non-disabled audienceBusinesses have to make it easy for us to engage with them online if they want to make us go there.Financial gains or discounts for online-only services – eg savings accounts, online statements
An ageing population brings challenges to websites - some overlap with accessibility challenges.David Sloan – more perspectives on this at 11:10
Equality act: a person with disabilities must not be put at a "substantial disadvantage", compared to a non-disabled user. Further: web hosts could also now be in breach of the Act, where the host has any knowledge that a website does not comply with the accessibility requirements.Web accessibility still doesn’t seem to excite many peopleIgnorance – don’t know how to, doesn’t affect me Visibility – secrecy of mediation process and any legal actionThere is no heat under the issueEven with initiatives like Fix the Web some companies still completely ignore the issue – Gail update later
Procuring a site – accessibility needs to be in the specBudgets – financial people need to understand the benefitsDesigners/developers – actually building the websites and web apps, templates, tab order, etc. Sometimes don’t have the space for manoeuvre even if they understand accessibility.Content authors – using CMS frameworks like WordPress, use of semantic elements - eg headings, lists + alt text for images
How do you learn? Where to go to?WCAG 2.0 Web Accessibility Initiative Web Content Accessibility Guidelines From December 2008 – some think they’re impenetrable but work being done to make it easier to understandGrant Broome will be covering some aspects of WCAG2.0 and cognitive impairment in his presentation at 2pmBS8878 Web Accessibility: Code of Practice – Issued late 2010. Introduction to digital accessibility for non-technical professionals. Explains different user needs. Provides digital accessibility framework for development and testing, as well as information that can be included in your accessibility statement. Jonathan Hassell will be talking more about how BS8878 affects you at 11:10Extra cost of accessibility is seen as an issue by some. But retrofitting accessibility can be very expensive – it needs to be designed in.Accessibility and usability are not exactly the same thing. Some companies spend a lot on usability but little on accessibility.
Last year a11yLDN focused on motor impairments, and the a11yLDN organisation team feel that since then there has been evidence that people are now considering motor impairments moreThis year Cognitive impairments because it’s feltthey are under represented in accessibility research, practice and policy - most of which centre on visual impairments.Web can provide independence, information and reduce community-related isolation and alienation
ADHD - Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder
Memory – more meaningful content gets into the functional brain quicker. Some users might not remember how they got to this particular page.Solving Problems – resilience may be low, people are apt to leave sites if they can’t work out what to do. Triggered by arriving somewhere they didn’t expect (confusing links or navigation) or a 404 error (bad links).Attention – Eg ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). Blinking adverts, scrolling text or any content that moves. It’s usually the distraction that causes the problem – not an inability to process information.Reading and linguistic – Estimates that 15-20% of population has some form of language or text comprehension difficulty. Many will not even be aware or admit to it.Also, non-literal text – sarcasm, irony, slang, colloquialisms, metaphors – all may be misunderstood.
Media players – including their icons
Links – overt focus + maybe use border rather than text underlineParagraphs – add hover background or lower border – technique helps some people with readability
How can the diverse needs of different disabled groups be incorporated into one websiteIt can be argued that it is not possible to present web content in ways that suit everyone.
A small selectionJuicy Studio – Article from 2005 covers items from the previous page in more detailWebAIM – Also a good reference about the types of cognitive impairmentWave – many people may be familiar with the WAVE accessibility tool. This provides a useful checklist for improving accessibility for the cognitive impaired.