The W4A 2009 conference was co-located with the Eighteenth International World Wide Web Conference, in Madrid, Spain. The two days of the conference were full of great presentations and discussions. The theme this year was "Web Accessibility for Older Users Are We There Yet?". If you do research related to this area, I am sure that you will find lots of interesting papers in the proceedings. The full proceedings is now available in the ACM DL and the papers that won the best paper awards are as follows:
2009 Best Paper Award: About the relevance of accessibility barriers in the everyday interactions of older people with the webThis paper reports key findings of a 3-year ethnographical study of the everyday interactions of older people with the web. The data consisted of in-situ observations and conversations with 388 older people while using myriads of web and computer technologies daily. The results revealed that the accessibility barriers that had a more negative effect on the daily interactions of older people with the web were due to their difficulties in remembering steps, understanding web and computer jargon and using the mouse, despite their willingness to use it. These obstacles were much more important than those caused by their difficulties perceiving visual information, understanding icons and using the keyboard. The prioritization of barriers was explained by two key aspects in ageing with new technologies, independency and inclusiveness, and a desired condition of web (user) interfaces, consistency in terminology. These results suggest that these three aspects should be considered carefully in enhancing web accessibility for older people, as well as allowing us to grasp older people's everyday web accessibility barriers. The paper discusses possible ways of making use of these findings to make the web more accessible to older people.Full Paper: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1535654.1535682
2009 John M Slatin Award for Best Communication Paper: Prosumers and accessibility: how to ensure a productive interaction
User-generated content (UGC) has become prevalent on the Web. It is not created by professional developers, but by prosumers: basic web users that also produce their own content. Thus, they lack any background, training, wherewithal, awareness and accountability regarding accessibility. We have extracted from top-used UGC sites a set of best practices to improve accessibility of UGC, focusing on the role the community itself plays in ensuring it. As we have merely compiled best practices, authoring tools and web content guidelines have not been redefined, but rather referenced and instantiated by UGC-specific recommendations.Full Paper: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1535654.1535665
Full Proceedings: Proceedings of the 2009 International Cross-Disciplinary Conference on Web Accessibililty (W4A) 2009, Madrid, Spain, April 20 - 21, 2009.
Labels: older Web users, W4A, Web accessibility