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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Benchmarking web accessibility evaluation tools: measuring the harm of sole reliance on automated tests

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TLDR
This paper empirically shows the capabilities of current automated evaluation tools and investigates the effectiveness of 6 state-of-the-art tools by analysing their coverage, completeness and correctness with regard to WCAG 2.0 conformance.
Abstract
The use of web accessibility evaluation tools is a widespread practice. Evaluation tools are heavily employed as they help in reducing the burden of identifying accessibility barriers. However, an over-reliance on automated tests often leads to setting aside further testing that entails expert evaluation and user tests. In this paper we empirically show the capabilities of current automated evaluation tools. To do so, we investigate the effectiveness of 6 state-of-the-art tools by analysing their coverage, completeness and correctness with regard to WCAG 2.0 conformance. We corroborate that relying on automated tests alone has negative effects and can have undesirable consequences. Coverage is very narrow as, at most, 50% of the success criteria are covered. Similarly, completeness ranges between 14% and 38%; however, some of the tools that exhibit higher completeness scores produce lower correctness scores (66-71%) due to the fact that catching as many violations as possible can lead to an increase in false positives. Therefore, relying on just automated tests entails that 1 of 2 success criteria will not even be analysed and among those analysed, only 4 out of 10 will be caught at the further risk of generating false positives.

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Citations
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Web Accessibility Evaluation of Government Websites for People with Disabilities in Turkey

TL;DR: Evaluated e-Government websites in Turkey by people disabilities based on the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 1.0 and 2.0 indicate that the prevalent priority-1 accessibility barriers identified were related to the absence of text equivalents for non-text elements and the failure of the static equivalents for dynamic content to get updated when the dynamic content changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Current Status of Accessibility in Mobile Apps

TL;DR: Two new accessibility conformance measures were proposed in this study: inaccessible element rate (IAER) and accessibility issue rate (AIR).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Egovernment and web accessibility in South America

TL;DR: The preliminary results of the research show that the majority of e-government websites do not provide adequate levels of web accessibility: the government, the Parliament and the Senate websites.
Book ChapterDOI

Tools for Web Accessibility Evaluation

TL;DR: The need for tools in this field is studied, the main characteristics of the tools used for Web accessibility evaluation are reviewed, and their future is reflected upon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revisiting the accessibility of Saudi Arabia government websites

TL;DR: The results show an improvement in the accessibility of Saudi government websites since 2010, yet future recommendations are highlighted to further improve their accessibility.
References
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Automatic Detection of Text Genre

TL;DR: A theory of genres as bundles of facets, which correlate with various surface cues, are proposed, and it is argued that genre detection based on surface cues is as successful as Detection based on deeper structural properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving web accessibility: a study of webmaster perceptions

TL;DR: A survey was created, and data was collected from 175 webmasters, indicating their knowledge on the topic of web accessibility and the reasons for their actions related to web accessibility.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Guidelines are only half of the story: accessibility problems encountered by blind users on the web

TL;DR: The results show that few developers are implementing the current version of WCAG, and even when the guidelines are implemented on websites there is little indication that people with disabilities will encounter fewer problems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Is your web page accessible?: a comparative study of methods for assessing web page accessibility for the blind

TL;DR: A comparison of different methods for finding accessibility problems affecting users who are blind finds multiple developers, using a screen reader, were most consistently successful at finding most classes of problems, and tended to find about 50% of known problems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Accessibility designer: visualizing usability for the blind

TL;DR: Accessibility Designer (aDesigner) is developed, which has capabilities to visualize blind users' usability by using colors and gradations, and reports on evaluations of real Web sites using Accessibility Designer.