IATE Term of the Week: Web Accessibility

每周晚学期:网页可访问性

2021-06-18 18:50 terminology Coordination

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“The power of the web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect.” (Tim Berners Lee) The web has become for many people an essential part of their daily lives, offering opportunities that weren’t available before. Access to information, including the web, has been also declared as a human right by the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Nevertheless, most websites and web tools are not accessible by people with disabilities, preventing them from accessing the web equally. First of all, web accessibility means that websites and devices are designed and coded to be accessible by people with physical, cognitive and intellectual disabilities. There are more than 100 million people in Europe who live with a disability and over 1 billion people worldwide. These numbers cannot be ignored when we aim at making the web accessible and, most importantly, inclusive. Who are we helping when we make our websites accessible? Web accessibility includes all disabilities which can represent a ‘barrier’ to access the web, namely: Visual disabilities, such as low vision or colour blindness. Auditory disabilities, such as deafness. Cognitive and neurological disabilities, which can include visitors with learning disabilities or people affected by seizures. Physical and motor disabilities, such as repetitive stress injury or muscular dystrophy. People without forms of disabilities can benefit from web accessibility, too. For example, anyone in a loud (or quiet) environment can use captions to watch a video, and a good contrast ratio can be beneficial in different lighting conditions, such as glare and sunlight. In addition, it can also enhance various other experiences, for example for visitors on a slow internet connection or for people with age-related impairments. In the final analysis, everyone will have a better user experience with an improved layout and design. How do we make our sites accessible? There are established international standards that provide guidelines for accessibility. W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) provides standards to help make the web accessible which are internationally recognized by governments and businesses. The most well known is the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). These guidelines are built around four core principles, which state that content must be POUR: Perceivable: information and user interface components are presented to users in ways they can perceive with one of their senses. Operable: users can interact with the content through any means they choose, such as by typing or by voice. Understandable: content shall be presented in a clear and simple language. Robust: information can be accessed by different devices, such as assistive technologies. The WCAG 2.0 classifies sites into three levels of accessibility: A (minimum accessibility level); AA (improved accessibility); AAA (highest level of accessibility). To measure the accessibility level of any website, there are specific analysis tools to evaluate different elements of the content and user interface. Alternatively, it is recommendable to ask for advice from web accessibility experts, who will be able to detect and correct accessibility problems in the digital content. However, some accessibility features can be implemented into the source code of websites and applications. For example, features to provide equivalent text alternatives for each image, which are read aloud by text-to-speech technologies, such as screen readers. Also headings, labels and especially link texts should be meaningful and provide contextual information when users click on it. Since media players and audio files are not accessible by deaf or by people with hard hearing, it is essential that the websites support speech-to-text software, such as dictation technology or that they provide a text transcript, which will make the content accessible. Web accessibility in the EU In February 2014, the European Parliament endorsed a draft law on the accessibility of websites. On 26 October 2016, the European Parliament approved the Web Accessibility Directive, which provides people with disabilities better access to websites and mobile apps managed by public sector bodies. The requirements are listed in the European standard EN 301 549 V 1.1.2, and also the European Telecommunication Standards Institute (ETSI) published that standard on their website. In 2019 the European Union established the European Accessibility Act, which sets common accessibility standards and encompasses technologies and services in the private sector. The legislation reflects the Commission’s commitment to build a social and inclusive European ‘Union of equality’, where no one is left behind in the digital European economy and society. IATE’s and TermCoord’s efforts in terms of web accessibility The new version of IATE and its public version, including the content and the interface, is compliant with WCAG 2.1 level AA. In addition, users have the possibility to interact with the user interface through several shortcuts and screen readers software, preventing extensive use of the mouse. The Terminology Coordination Unit of the European Parliament is also engaging in gradually making the website termcoord.eu accessible to everybody, taking part in accessibility training to raise awareness about digital inclusion. Accessible Technology. 2021. Four Principles of Accessibility | Accessible Technology | University of Colorado Boulder. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.colorado.edu/accessible-technology/four-principles-accessibility. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. Clear Helper. 2021. Web Accessibility for People with Cognitive Disabilities. [ONLINE] Available at: https://clearhelper.blog/. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. IATE European Union Terminology. 2021. Accessibility statement for the IATE web application. [ONLINE] Available at: https://iate.europa.eu/accessibility. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. Marty Wallwood. 2021. What is web accessibility?. The basics of web accessibility, and how it has evolved over time. | by Marty Wallwood | UX Collective. [ONLINE] Available at: https://uxdesign.cc/what-is-web-accessibility-they-asked-80a39a7ebe59. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. MEPs vote to make online public services accessible to everyone | News | European Parliament. 2021. MEPs vote to make online public services accessible to everyone | News | European Parliament. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20140220IPR36573/meps-vote-to-make-online-public-services-accessible-to-everyone. [Accessed 17 June 2021]. Shaping Europe’s digital future. 2021. Web Accessibility | Shaping Europe’s digital future. [ONLINE] Available at: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/web-accessibility. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. The adoption of a directive on the accessibility of the sector bodies’ websites and mobile apps Shaping Europe’s digital future. 2021. The adoption of a directive on the accessibility of the sector bodies’ websites and mobile apps | Shaping Europe’s digital future. [ONLINE] Available at: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/adoption-directive-accessibility-sector-bodies-websites-and-mobile-apps. [Accessed 17 June 2021]. W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI). 2021. Introduction to Web Accessibility | Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) | W3C. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.w3.org/WAI/fundamentals/accessibility-intro/. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. Wikipedia. 2021. Web accessibility – Wikipedia. [ONLINE] Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_accessibility. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. World Health Organization. 2021. Facts on disability. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/Life-stages/disability-and-rehabilitation/data-and-statistics/facts-on-disability. [Accessed 17 June 2021]. YouTube. 2021. Introduction to Web Accessibility and W3C Standards – YouTube. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20SHvU2PKsM. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. YouTube. 2021. What is Web Accessibility in 60 seconds! – YouTube. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hufMi9LZX2I. [Accessed 15 June 2021]. Written by Maria Carmen Staiano, Schuman Trainee at the Terminology Coordination Unit. She holds a Bachelor’s in Linguistic and Cultural Mediation and a Master’s in Specialized Translation at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”. She has experience in translation technologies, project management and localisation.
“网络的力量在于它的普遍性。人人不论残疾与否都能获得服务是一个重要方面。” (蒂姆·伯纳斯·李) 网络已经成为许多人日常生活中必不可少的一部分,提供了以前没有的机会。联合国《残疾人权利公约》也宣布获得信息,包括网络,是一项人权。然而,残疾人无法访问大多数网站和网络工具,使他们无法平等地访问网络。 首先,网页无障碍是指网站和设备的设计和编码是为了让有身体,认知和智力残疾的人能够访问。 欧洲有1亿多残疾人,全世界有10亿多残疾人。当我们致力于使网络具有可访问性,最重要的是使其具有包容性时,不能忽视这些数字。 当我们使我们的网站可访问时,我们在帮助谁? 网页无障碍包括所有可能成为访问网页“障碍”的残疾,即: 视力障碍,如低视力或色盲。 听觉障碍,如耳聋。 认知和神经残疾,可包括有学习障碍的访客或受癫痫影响的人。 身体和运动残疾,如重复性应激损伤或肌肉营养不良。 没有任何残疾的人也可以从网络无障碍中受益。例如,在大声(或安静)环境中的任何人都可以使用字幕观看视频,良好的对比度可以在不同的照明条件下有益,例如眩光和阳光。 此外,它还可以增强各种其他体验,例如,对于互联网连接速度较慢的访客或患有与年龄有关的障碍的人来说。归根结底,有了改进的布局和设计,大家会有更好的用户体验。 我们如何使我们的网站可访问? 有既定的国际标准为无障碍提供了指导方针。 W3C(万维网联盟)提供了一些标准来帮助人们访问网络,这些标准在国际上得到了政府和企业的认可。最广为人知的是Web Content Accessibility Guidelines(WCAG)。 这些指导方针是围绕四个核心原则构建的,这些原则规定内容必须是倾注的: 可感知:信息和用户界面组件以用户可以用他们的一种感官感知的方式呈现给用户。 可操作:用户可以通过他们选择的任何方式与内容进行交互,比如通过打字或者通过语音。 易懂:内容应以清晰,简单的语言呈现。 强大的:信息可以通过不同的设备访问,例如辅助技术。 WCAG2.0将站点分为三个可访问性级别: A(最低无障碍级别); AA(改善无障碍环境); AAA(最高级别的可访问性)。 为了衡量任何网站的无障碍水平,有专门的分析工具来评估内容和用户界面的不同元素。另外,建议向网络无障碍专家咨询,他们将能够检测和纠正数字内容中的无障碍问题。 然而,一些无障碍功能可以在网站和应用程序的源代码中实施。例如,为每张图片提供等效的文本选择,通过文本转语音技术,如屏幕阅读器来朗读。另外,标题、标签,特别是链接文本应该是有意义的,当用户点击时,提供上下文信息。由于聋人或重听者无法使用媒体播放器和音频文件,因此网站必须支持语音转文字软件,如听写技术,或提供文本转录,这将使内容无障碍。 欧盟的无障碍网页 2014年2月,欧洲议会批准了一项关于网站无障碍性的法律草案。2016年10月26日,欧洲议会批准了《网络无障碍指令》,该指令为残疾人提供了更好地访问公共部门机构管理的网站和移动应用程序。这些要求在欧洲标准EN 301 549 V1.1.2中列出,欧洲电信标准协会(ETSI)也在其网站上公布了该标准。2019年,欧盟制定了《欧洲无障碍法案》,制定了共同的无障碍标准,并涵盖了私营部门的技术和服务。 该立法反映了委员会对建立一个社会和包容的欧洲 "平等联盟 "的承诺,在数字欧洲经济和社会中没有人被落下。 IATE和TermCoord在网络可访问性方面的努力 IATE的新版本及其公开版本,包括内容和界面,都符合WCAG 2.1 AA级标准。此外,用户有可能通过几个快捷键和屏幕阅读器软件与用户界面互动,防止大量使用鼠标。 欧洲议会的术语协调股也在参与逐步使网站termcoord.eu对每个人都无障碍,参加无障碍培训以提高对数字包容的认识。 无障碍技术。2021.无障碍技术的四项原则|无障碍技术|科罗拉多大学博尔德分校。[ONLINE] Available at:https://www.colorado.edu/accessible-technology/four- principles-accessibility. 2021年6月5日访问。 清除助手。2021年。为有认知障碍的人提供无障碍的网页。[在线]网址:https://clearhelper.blog/。[2021年6月15访问]。 欧洲联盟最新术语。2021年。IATE web应用程序的可访问性语句。[在线]网址:https://iate.europa.eu/accessibility。[2021年6月15访问]。 马蒂·沃尔伍德。2021年。什么是网页可访问性?。web可访问性的基本知识,以及它是如何随着时间的推移而发展的。作者:Marty Wallwood UX Collective。[在线]网址:https://uxdesign.cc/what-is-web-accessibility-they-ask-80a39a7ebe59。[2021年6月15访问]。 欧洲议会议员投票让每个人都能获得在线公共服务。2021年。欧洲议会议员投票让每个人都能获得在线公共服务。[在线]见:https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20140220ipr36573/meps-vote-to-make-online-public-services-access-to-everyone。[2021年六月十七日查阅]。 塑造欧洲数字化的未来。2021年。网络可访问性塑造了欧洲数字化的未来。[在线]见:https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/web-accessibility。[2021年6月15访问]。 通过了一项关于部门机构网站和移动应用程序无障碍的指令,塑造了欧洲的数字未来。2021年。通过了一项关于部门机构网站和移动应用程序无障碍的指令,塑造了欧洲的数字未来。[在线]见:https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/adoption-directive-accessibility-sector-bodies-wellses-and-mobile-apps。[2021年六月十七日查阅]。 W3C Web可访问性倡议(WAI)。2021年。Web辅助功能介绍Web辅助功能倡议(WAI)W3C。[在线]可查阅:https://www.w3.org/wai/judials/accessibility-intro/。[2021年6月15访问]。 维基百科。2021年。网页可访问性-维基百科。[在线]网址:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/web_accessibility。[2021年6月15访问]。 欧洲议会议员投票让每个人都能获得在线公共服务。2021年。欧洲议会议员投票让每个人都能获得在线公共服务。[在线]见:https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20140220ipr36573/meps-vote-to-make-online-public-services-access-to-everyone。[2021年六月十七日查阅]。 YouTube。2021年。介绍Web可访问性和W3C标准-YouTube。[在线]网址:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20shvu2pksm。[2021年6月15访问]。 YouTube。2021年。什么是60秒内的网页可访问性!-YouTube。[在线]网址:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUFMI9LZX2i。[2021年6月15访问]。 作者Maria Carmen Staiano,Schuman在术语协调单位的见习。她在那不勒斯“l'Orientale”大学获得语言和文化调解学士学位和专业翻译硕士学位。她在翻译技术,项目管理和本地化方面有丰富的经验。

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