CS Faculty Candidate Colloquium   

 

Thursday                    ***Special Time and Location***
February 19
10:45 - 11:50 AM 
Kelley 1007

 

Jeffrey P. Bigham 
Ph.D. Candidate
Computer Science & Engineering Dept.
University of Washington

Improved Access by and for Blind Web Users 

The web is an unparalleled information resource, but remains difficult
and frustrating for millions of blind and low vision people to use. The
openness and flexibility of the web make it possible to better adapt
content for all users, but until recently, blind web users have been
left out of this process. In this talk, I'll discuss the following three
projects designed to improve our understanding of how blind people
access the web and enable them to independently improve access: (i)
WebinSitu facilitates longitudinal remote user studies, (ii) TrailBlazer
makes non-visual access to the web more usable by predicting what users
might want to do next, and (iii) WebAnywhere adds speech output to any
web page without installing new software. These projects have not only
made significant advances in web accessibility and usability for blind
web users, but have also yielded general lessons applicable for adapting
and delivering content for all users. 

Biography

Jeffrey P. Bigham is a Ph.D. candidate in the Computer Science and
Engineering Department at the University of Washington. He graduated
with a B.S.E in Computer Science from Princeton University in 2003. His
work focuses on enabling end users to improve the interfaces they use to
access web content, especially those used by blind web users. He started
the WebInSight project at the University of Washington with his advisor
Richard E. Ladner. As part of this project, Jeffrey has conducted
studies to understand the challenges faced by blind web users and
developed innovative solutions to address those problems. He invented
the WebAnywhere web application to provide blind web users non-visual
access to the web from any computer, even locked-down public terminals,
for which he won the Microsoft Imagine Cup Accessible Technology Award,
the W4A Accessibility Challenge Delegate's Award and the Andrew Mellon
Award for Technology Collaboration. In 2008, he became an Osberg
Presidential Fellow. 

 

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