A presentation at A11y Meetup Berlin in in Berlin, Germany by Damien Senger
LOWER LITERACY: IT’S NOT THE USER, IT’S THE PRODUCT A11y Meetup • Berlin, Germany • July 2, 2019
Photo by iam Se7en on Unsplash
Photo by Tamarcus Brown on Unsplash
Photo by Praveen Gupta on Unsplash
Photo by Peter Lawrence on Unsplash
Photo from The Gender Spectrum Collection
Hi! 👋 I’m Damien.
Hi! 👋 I’m Damien. I am a queer digital designer, specialised in accessibility (WAS IAAP). I work for Castor EDC in Amsterdam as a Design systems & Accessibility Lead. I use they/them pronouns.
So! Let’s talk about readability.
But first, why?
Reading is not an easy thing. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
The Web is mainly text-based And a text is not accessible per se. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
There is two groups of reading impairments A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Vision impairments Blindness Eye infection Hay’s fever Visual distraction Microsoft icons A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Cognitive impairments Dyslexia Hyperlexia (Autism/ADHD) Fluency Stressful context Microsoft icons A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
A quick focus on dyslexia
± 10% of the global population is having a degree of dyslexia. World Health Organization, 2011 Dyslexia Research Trust, 2014 University of Gothenburg, Sahlgrenska Academy, 2014 United Kingdom NHS, 2017 A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Commonly associated with ADHD, autism or dyscalculia. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Not always since childhood: it can appear after traumatic brain injuries and strokes. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Dyslexia is not only about reading. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Studies show that improving readability for dyslexic users improve the experience for all. Ten guidelines for improving accessibility for people with dyslexia. V. Zarach - CETIS University of Wales Bangor, 2012 A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
How do we read?
Reading is about sounds. Reading is about music. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Reading is mainly a phonological process. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
The reading experience depends a lot of the context & environment A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Reading is not linear, we are reading by saccades. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
And between each saccades, we have something called fixation. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
During a fixation, everything except the focus is blurry. § A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
And every few fixations, we need a small break. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
The size of our saccades and the duration of fixations depend of the type of reading. When browsing websites, we are mainly using our exploratory reading pattern. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) is developed through the W3C process in cooperation with individuals and organizations around the world, with a goal of providing a single shared standard for web content accessibility that meets the needs of individuals, organizations, and governments internationally. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
We are first analysing the paragraph before starting to read. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
On a screen, we are not reading in a word-by-word manner. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Yuo cna porbalby raed tihs esaliy desptie teh msispeillgns. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
You can probably read this easily despite the misspellings. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
This is possible thanks to letters’ identifying features A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
These identifying features allow us to read more easily. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Readability READABILITY A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
problem porbelm pbleorm A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Saccades & fixations captured during an experimentation by Nielsen Norman Group
Readability 101.
credits: Mijksenaar
Understandable even without knowledge of the language credits: Mijksenaar
Good visual information architecture credits: Mijksenaar
Size clearly adapted to the context credits: Mijksenaar
Icons, hierarchy & wording consistency across the whole journey credits: Mijksenaar
The 4C of readability
Continuity: repetition of the information until the endpoint
Conspicuity: being easily seen or noticeable, attract people’s attention
Consistency: keeping the same wording along the way
Clarity: the message needs to be clearly understandable
Thanks Paul Mijksenaar 👍
Readability & web content.
First, Open Dyslexia is not a solution. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
There is no one-fits-all solution. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
So what? A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
A good contrast is primordial. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
But too much contrast can create a blur effect. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
But too much contrast can create a blur effect. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Try shades of black for chars, and beige for backgrounds. Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Font types have an impact on readability for dyslexic folks. Good Fonts for Dyslexia L Rello, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the 15th international ACM, 2013 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Sans-serif are the most readable fonts, especially Helvetica, Courier and Arial. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Sans-serif, roman and monospaced fonts increase reading performance. Italic fonts are doing the opposite. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
The most optimal font-size is somewhere around 14 pt. An eye tracking study of how font size, font type, and pictures influence online reading. D. Beymer, D. M. Russell, and P. Z. Orton - Proceedings INTERACT 2007, pages 456–460, 2007. Size Matters (Spacing not): 18 Points for a Dyslexic-friendly Wikipedia L Rello, M Pielot, MC Marcos, R Carlini - Proceedings of the 10th …, 2013 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Size Matters (Spacing not): 18 Points for a Dyslexic-friendly Wikipedia L Rello, M Pielot, MC Marcos, R Carlini - Proceedings of the 10th …, 2013 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Line-spacing appears to have few impact on readability. Size Matters (Spacing not): 18 Points for a Dyslexic-friendly Wikipedia L Rello, M Pielot, MC Marcos, R Carlini - Proceedings of the 10th …, 2013 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
“ The results can be summarised as size matters, spacing doesn’t. — Luz Rello Web Research Group & NLP Research Group Universitat Pompeu Fabra Barcelona, Spain
Spacing doesn’t matter… except when it does. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
White space is your best friend. We need resting space. Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Dyslexic-friendly guidelines for web text: Line spacing: 1.4 Paragraph spacing: 2 Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Column width is complex: Narrower is better for readability, Wider is decreasing the perception of complexity. Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Column width is complex: A good compromise is around 75-80 chars per line. Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Use bold and colours for important content Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Avoid underlining and italics, these tend to make the text appear to run together. British Dyslexia Association Guidelines for Web Design, 2019 Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Avoid text in uppercase or small caps, it is less familiar to the user and harder to read. British Dyslexia Association Guidelines for Web Design, 2019 A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
When reading a paragraph, users should be able to highlight text. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Avoid the use of too generic content, be specific for links A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
🎨 Having a good contrast is essential, but careful 💛 Using yellowish/beige background can help 🔤 Sans-serif and monospaced for the win 📏 White space is your friend, use it wisely 🚨 Use colours & weights to attract attention role=drinks • June 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Macro-typography & Layout Layout Guidelines for Web Text and a Web Service to Improve Accessibility for Dyslexics L Rello, G Kanvinde, R Baeza-Yates - Proceedings of the international …, 2012 - dl.acm.org 2.
Text alignment is super important. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Left-align text in left-to-right languages. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Avoid justification and centered-text. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Multi-columns content can be confusing. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Heading & Information hierarchy A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Always include the most important points in the first two paragraphs. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Start headings with the words carrying most information A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Break up the content with regular section headings. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Offer an outline and a summary for long content. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Basically, use HTML and design accordingly. (yeah, dl exists and it’s amazing) A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Keeping consistent layout motivates our users to read more when looking for an information. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Users should have two ways to access an information. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
↔ Prefer left alignment for texts in LtR languages 📢 Use headings to make the information clearer 💻 Use semantic markup & design accordingly 🎛 Create consistency in the layout 🗺 Provide two ways to access content role=drinks • June 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Adopt an inclusive writing-style Based on the British Dyslexia Association Guidelines for Web Design 3.
Propose distraction-free experiences
You know… this kind of really useful distractions
Hey buddy! You looks friendly but… no thank you!
And please… do not make assumption on the time needed by a user to read a content.
The last, but not the least… +1
✂ A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
It’s time to remove unnecessary content. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
How to experiment with your projects?
Using recording tools showing mouse position heat-maps A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
You can learn what is catchy and how to optimise a page
Using a screen reader and tools like the Web Rotor. A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
Calculate your readability score A11y Berlin • July 2019 • @iamhiwelo
A series of algorithms exist to help you understand the readability of your content.
Some good examples.
Definitely not perfect (why such a painful green OMG 😅), but interesting and distraction-limited experience.
Readability and content grouping with in clear way
Tack! 5 Merci beaucoup ! 3 Bedankt! 6 Thank you! 4 Vielen danke! 7 @iamhiwelo
Damien Senger Digital designer, specialised in accessibility. raccoon.studio • noti.st/hiwelo @iamhiwelo
Reading is a complex activity for our brains. We need to associate letters with sounds, and to understand the meaning of this music. Unfortunately for some users, this does not always work smoothly. It is complicated for people with reading or cognitive impairments but also for everybody depending on the context. Luckily, there are a lot of small improvements and tips every designer, content-writer and developer can use in a project to improve the life of all users.
Here’s what was said about this presentation on social media.
Damien’s talk about readability and #dyslexia is one of the best #accessibility talks I have ever seen! Full of great informations and examples! Thank you for the great talk @iamhiwelo. #a11yberlin pic.twitter.com/KB0zyn9ffx
— Maja Benke (@MajaBenke) July 2, 2019
Welcome @iamhiwelo at @a11yberlin presenting insights on how to improve the readability of our projects 👌#a11y #inclusivity pic.twitter.com/XWeXbyeS0V
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
10% of the global population is having a degree of dyslexia! It can appear also after a traumatic experience.@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
10% of global population is having a degree of dyslexia @a11yberlin by @iamhiwelo pic.twitter.com/LGMppHoCpd
— Priyanka Naik (@priyankanaik625) July 2, 2019
Reading is not linear. It’s about sound and musical tones and depends on the surrounding context and environment.@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
The second talk today at #a11yberlin from @iamhiwelo focuses on #dyslexia! They have some amazing examples on how dyslexia effects people and how dyslexic people can also have advantages over non-dyslexic people. Also making website accessible for dyslexic people helps everyone! pic.twitter.com/n91dDnqMAs
— Bernhard Kau (@2ndKauBoy) July 2, 2019
Great example of showing fixation points as an example of reading a paragraph of text.@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity pic.twitter.com/KriIdvOmIi
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
Thx @iamhiwelo for that Talk! 🙏
— Claudia Sprengel (@c_sprengel) July 2, 2019
I just understood my dyslexia better! @a11yberlin 💜💙💚💛🧡❤ pic.twitter.com/KTRolUgznU
Why it’s important to avoid UPPERCASE and Capitalising Titles?Because of the overall shape of words which is affecting directly our reading experience 🙂@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity pic.twitter.com/TcGKOJpJTA
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
"If it works with stressed people in Airports, it's working on the internet." @iamhiwelo pic.twitter.com/uVjMsIzNCL
— Claudia Sprengel (@c_sprengel) July 2, 2019
Readability 101
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
➡️ Consistency
➡️ Clarity
➡️ Continuity (repetition)
➡️ Conspicuity (being easily distinguishable)@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity
Interesting insights in readability from @iamhiwelo @a11yberlin
— Fräulein Kommdawegda (@Glitzerpopitzer) July 2, 2019
Recommend characters per line 75-80, using bold and colors for important content, avoid underline and italics, and be specific on links.@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
@iamhiwelo Thanks for your really interesting and entertaining talk about readability! #a11ymeetup
— Josephine (@josisch) July 2, 2019
A good test for readability? Try to read a Website when you're drunk :D @iamhiwelo @a11yberlin
— Fräulein Kommdawegda (@Glitzerpopitzer) July 2, 2019
🏃♂️ Active voice
— Radimir Bitsov (@radibit) July 2, 2019
🔭 Short and simple sentences
🌅 Use images and media
✅ List is better than a paragraph
⚒ Avoid jargon-specific language@iamhiwelo // @a11yberlin #a11y #inclusivity pic.twitter.com/XO3j6HqlH9