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Investigating Color Blind User Interface Accessibility via Simulated Interfaces

Authors :
Jamil, Amaan
Denes, Gyorgy
Source :
MDPI Computers 13, 53, 2024
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Over 300 million people who live with color vision deficiency (CVD) have a decreased ability to distinguish between colors, limiting their ability to interact with websites and software packages. User interface designers have taken various approaches to tackle the issue with most offering a high contrast mode. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) outline some best practices for maintaining accessibility that have been adopted and recommended by several governments; however, it is currently uncertain how this impacts perceived user functionality and if this could result in a reduced aesthetic look. In the absence of subjective data, we aim to investigate how a CVD observer might rate the functionality and aesthetics of existing UIs. However, the design of a comparative study of CVD vs. non-CVD populations is inherently hard, therefore we build on the successful field of physiologically-based CVD models, and propose a novel simulation-based experimental protocol, where non-CVD observers rate the relative aesthetics and functionality of screenshots of 20 popular websites as seen in full color vs. with simulated CVD. Our results show that relative aesthetics and functionality correlate positively and that an operating-system-wide high contrast mode can reduce both aesthetics and functionality. While our results are only valid in the context of simulated CVD screenshots, the approach has the benefit of being easily deployable, and can help to spot a number of common pitfalls in production. Finally, we propose a AAA-A classification of the interfaces we analyzed.<br />Comment: 16 pages, published to MDPI Computers

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
MDPI Computers 13, 53, 2024
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.10357
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/computers13020053