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ASSETS
2008
ACM

Investigating sighted users' browsing behaviour to assist web accessibility

14 years 1 months ago
Investigating sighted users' browsing behaviour to assist web accessibility
The rapid advancement of World Wide Web (Web) technology and constant need for attractive Websites produce pages that hinder visually impaired users. We assert that understanding how sighted users browse Web pages can provide important information that will enhance Web Accessibility, especially for visually impaired users. We present an eye tracking study where sighted users’ browsing behaviour on nine Web pages was investigated to determine how the page’s visual clutter is related to sighted users’ browsing patterns. The results show that salient elements attract users’ attention first, users spend more time on the main content of the page and users tend to fixate on the first three or four items on the menu lists. Common gaze patterns begin at the salient elements of the page, move to the main content, header, right column and left column of the page and finish at the footer area. We argue that the results should be used as the initial step for proposing guidelines that ...
Eleni Michailidou, Simon Harper, Sean Bechhofer
Added 08 Nov 2010
Updated 08 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where ASSETS
Authors Eleni Michailidou, Simon Harper, Sean Bechhofer
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