安大略省公共图书馆社交媒体馈送要求增加 Alt 文本的使用,以提高内容的可访问性

Maria King
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(2023). “May be a picture of a dog and a book”: The inaccessibility of public libraries’ social media feeds. Partnership, 18(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.21083/partnership.v18i1.7008\nObjective – The research project sought to explore how accessible the social media feeds of Ontario public libraries are, particularly the use of alt text for images, by assessing the usage of alt text and by making recommendations for appropriate use within social media posts.\nDesign – Collection of social media posts and computer-assisted textual analysis of visual media content.\nSetting – 76 public libraries and 9 public library systems in Ontario, Canada.\nSubjects – Approximately 900 Ontario public library social media posts from Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.\nMethods – A random number generator sampling of 30 libraries per platform from the relevant social media accounts from a spreadsheet created using Ontario Public Library Statistics (OPLS) data of social media usage from the included libraries was initially created capturing 76 individual libraries. 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摘要

回顾:Hill, H., & Oswald, K. (2023)."可能是狗和书的照片":公共图书馆社交媒体的不可访问性。合伙关系》,18(1),1-14。https://doi.org/10.21083/partnership.v18i1.7008Objective - 该研究项目旨在通过评估alt文本的使用情况,并就如何在社交媒体帖子中适当使用alt文本提出建议,从而探索安大略省公共图书馆社交媒体供稿的可访问性,尤其是图片alt文本的使用情况。设计 - 收集社交媒体帖子,并对视觉媒体内容进行计算机辅助文本分析。环境 - 加拿大安大略省的 76 家公共图书馆和 9 个公共图书馆系统。研究对象 - 来自 Facebook、Twitter 和 Instagram 的约 900 篇安大略省公共图书馆社交媒体帖子。方法 - 使用安大略省公共图书馆统计(OPLS)数据创建的电子表格中的社交媒体使用情况,从相关社交媒体账户中的每个平台随机数生成器抽取 30 家图书馆,最初创建了 76 家单独的图书馆。然后,研究人员对九个图书馆系统的帖子进行了有针对性的抽样调查,每个图书馆系统为超过 25 万居民提供服务。主要结果 - 在随机抽样选出的 76 个图书馆和服务人口超过 25 万的 9 个图书馆系统中,只有 2 个经常使用 alt 文本,5 个至少有一个 alt 文本实例。在研究分析的三个社交媒体平台中,只有多伦多公共图书馆定期使用alt文本。该研究最初还旨在评估公共图书馆在社交媒体帖子中使用的alt文本的质量。结论 - 由于抽样帖子中没有包含任何alt文本,因此无法实现分析alt文本以提出改进建议的最初目标。缺少alt文本会阻碍一些残障用户参与内容和信息,从而导致不公平的体验。公共图书馆应考虑其与用户接触的无障碍性,并努力提高社交媒体帖子的无障碍性。
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Increased Usage of Alt Text Is Required Across Ontario Public Library Social Media Feeds to Increase the Accessibility of Content
A Review of: Hill, H., & Oswald, K. (2023). “May be a picture of a dog and a book”: The inaccessibility of public libraries’ social media feeds. Partnership, 18(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.21083/partnership.v18i1.7008 Objective – The research project sought to explore how accessible the social media feeds of Ontario public libraries are, particularly the use of alt text for images, by assessing the usage of alt text and by making recommendations for appropriate use within social media posts. Design – Collection of social media posts and computer-assisted textual analysis of visual media content. Setting – 76 public libraries and 9 public library systems in Ontario, Canada. Subjects – Approximately 900 Ontario public library social media posts from Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Methods – A random number generator sampling of 30 libraries per platform from the relevant social media accounts from a spreadsheet created using Ontario Public Library Statistics (OPLS) data of social media usage from the included libraries was initially created capturing 76 individual libraries. Then the researchers performed targeted sampling of posts from the nine library systems serving over 250,000 residents each. Researchers identified the 10 most recent posts from each included platform feed, and then undertook textual analysis for the presence of alt text with each post using two Mozilla Firefox browser extensions that determine the presence of alt text. Main Results – Of the 76 unique libraries chosen by the random sampling and the nine library systems that serve populations over 250,000, only two regularly used alt text and five had at least one instance of alt text. Only Toronto Public Library regularly included alt text across each of the three social media platforms analyzed by the study. The study also initially aimed to assess the quality of alt text used by public libraries in social media posts. However, due to the lack of alt text use across the sample, this was not possible at the scale initially aimed for, although a small number of examples are analyzed in the findings. Conclusion – The initial goal of analyzing the alt text to make recommendations for improved usage could not be realized due to the surprising lack of inclusion of any alt text across the sampled posts. This lack of any alt text can prevent some disabled users from engaging with content and information, leading to an inequitable experience. Public libraries should consider how accessible their engagement with users is and seek to improve the accessibility of social media posts.
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