posted on 2006-11-01, 15:10authored byRoger Stone, Jatinder Dhiensa, Colin Machin
This work originated by considering the needs of visually
impaired users but may have wider application. A profile captures
some key descriptors or preferences of a user and their browsing
device. Individual users may maintain any number of profiles
which they can edit for use in different situations, for different
tasks or with different devices. A profile is described in terms of
essentiality and proficiency. Essentiality is used to control the
quantity of information that is transmitted and proficiency is used
to control the format. Various levels of essentiality are introduced
into a document by the technique known as microformatting.
Proficiency (for the visually impaired) includes a description of
minimum acceptable font size, preferred font face and preferred
text and background colours. A key feature of the proficiency
profile is the accessibility component which captures the user's
tolerance of accessibility issues in a document, for example the
presence of images or the markup of tables. The document
delivery tool works as a kind of filter to reduce the content to the
level of essentiality requested, to make the various presentation
changes and to warn of accessibility issues as specified in the
user's profile. Encouraging preliminary results have been obtained
from testing the prototype with subjects from the local RNIB
college.
History
School
Science
Department
Computer Science
Pages
48588 bytes
Citation
STONE, DHIENSA and MACHIN, 2006. Profile-based web document delivery. IN: Proceedings of the 2006 ACM Symposium on Document Engineering, Amsterdam, 2006, pp. 215-217