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Challenging Information Foraging
Theory: Screen Reader Users are not
Always Driven by Information Scent
24th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media
Hypertext 2013
Markel Vigo1 & Simon Harper2 University of Manchester (UK)
1: @markelvigo
2: @sharpic
markel.vigo@manchester.ac.uk
simon.harper@manchester.ac.uk
http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.695073
Problem
• We do not know all the navigation
tactics employed by screen reader
users
• Key to build navigation models
• Lack of navigation models for screen
reader users
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 2
Goal
• Bridge the gap on the lack of
knowledge on navigation tactics
• Survey existing navigation models (for
sighted user)
• Inform navigation models to make
robust models
• Consider coping strategies
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 3
Navigation models
• High certainty about a constrained
universe
• Predict user behaviour
• Interaction models: GOMS, KLM
• Evaluation of interfaces
• Often used in research settings
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 4
Navigation models
• Built on Information Foraging Theory (IFT)
– Web page ≈ information patch
– User ≈ consumer
• Link selection=
• Information scent (IS) measures the
relevance of proximal cues that lead
towards distal goals
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013
Max
E(Info_Value)
E(Cost)
é
ë
ê
ù
û
ú
5
Navigation models
• Models for sighted user differ on
– The conceptualisation of information scent
– On the strategy for page reading
• Few empirical studies are based on link
selection or navigation strategies
• Low predictive power
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 6
Who are screen reader
users
• Blind users
• Low vision users
• Potentially generalisable to users of
auditory interfaces:
– Applications on the move: car, walking, cycling
– Situationally disabled users
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 7
How do screen readers
navigate
• What do we know so far?
• Behaviours occurring on ideal situations
• How is the navigation when
encountering:
– Accessibility barriers
– Design issues
– Usability problems
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 8
Stereotypical behaviours
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013
1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
4. Main content
5. Banner
3. Primary
navigation
links
6. 2ndary
navigation
links
7. Footer
8. Miscellaneous bottom links
1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
3. Primary navigation links
4. Main content
1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
3. Primary navigation links
4. Main content
(a) Listening to content (b) Exhaustive scanning
9
Stereotypical behaviours
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013
1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
4. Main content
5. Banner
3. Primary
navigation
links
6. 2ndary
navigation
links
7. Footer
8. Miscellaneous bottom links
H
1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
3. Primary navigation links
4. Main content
(d) Information scent driven gambling
scanning: headings navigation
H
H
H
H
H1. Miscellaneous top links
2. Mast header
3. Primary navigation links
4. Main content
(c) Gambling scanning: skip
line navigation
skip 6 lines
skip 5 lines
skip 5 lines
skip 5 lines
10
Analysis of coping tactics
• Secondary analysis of 2 user studies
– Ethnographic longitudinal
– User test
• 17 users
• Isolated 9 coping tactics grouped by
– Link selection tactics
– Exploration tactics
– Navigation tactics
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 11
Link selection tactics
T1: Deliberately clicking on low
scented links
• Accessibility problems:
– “I'm just going to click on one of these
things, I don’t know what it is for ”
• Information overload:
– “when I was listening I heard the target
link... you can have 30 or 230 links that
you have to sit and listen to! ”
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 12
Link selection tactics
T2: Clicking on any link
• When coming across unexpected
functionalities or content
– On a linked keyword search where search
box expected: “does not tell me where to
do this ”
– On a SERP that did not contain expected
results: “found a few links, none directly
what I want ”
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 13
Intra-page exploration
tactics
T3: Escaping from useless or
inaccessible content by tabbing down
T4: Fast tab/arrow down the page
without completely listening to content
– By default
– On familiar pages
– On content arranged according to some
criterion
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 14
Intra-page exploration
tactics
T5: Gaining orientation
• By going to the top of the page
– “not sure where I am...if in doubt go back
to the beginning ”
• Users pay more attention in the second
reading
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 15
Inter-page navigation
tactics
T6: Backtracking to a shelter
• When user mobility is reduced
– Getting stuck: “I seem to have come to a
dead end here”
– Looping behaviours: “I’ve got back to
shorts again...shorts again!”
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 16
Inter-page navigation
tactics
T7: Re-checking
• Fast revisitations as reassurance
mechanisms
T8: Retracing
• Users retrace their steps from a shelter
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 17
Withdrawal
T9: Giving up
• Provoked by sequence of failures and
unsuccessful interactions.
• Observed on users who navigate with
trouble and encounter an obstacle
different to ones experienced.
• E.g.: encountering accessibility barriers
after escaping from a loop of pages
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 18
Implications
Informing navigation models
• Navigation models for sighted users
mimic screen reader user behaviour in
ordinary circumstances
• To cover extraordinary circumstances
minor modifications are needed:
– Gaining orientation (T5)
– Re-tracing (T8)
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 19
Implications
Challenging established conceptions
• In ordinary circumstances IS is a reliable
indicator
• In extraordinary circumstances users are
not driven by IS but escape from problems
– Click on low scented (t1) or any link (t2)
– Fast tabbing down (t3, t4)
– Backtracking to a shelter (t6)
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 20
Implications
Challenging established conceptions
• IFT: a hyperlink will be selected when the tradeoff
between information gaining and cost of accessing
is low
• SR users: cost of accessing is minimised at the
expenses of gaining low quality information
• Alternatively, SR users have low satisficing levels:
any web patch is good enough
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 21
Max
E(Info_Value)
E(Cost)
é
ë
ê
ù
û
ú
Implications
Challenging established conceptions
• This behaviour reminds of that of animals
making risk-sensitive foraging decisions
– Risk prone individuals: those undergoing
extreme situations take the risk of selecting low
scented link (t1,t2)
– Risk averse individuals: less severe problems
take a more conservative strategy by moving to
another web patch (t3, t4, t6)
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 22
Implications
Challenging established conceptions
• IFT: users leave a website when the scent of the
current page is below the average of the pages
visited
• SR users give up after overcoming a number of
problematic interactions
• We have 2 thresholds: information scent and
frustration threshold
ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 23
Follow up
2 May 2013 24
Contact
@markelvigo | markel.vigo@manchester.ac.uk
Presentation DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.695073
Datasets
http://wel-data.cs.manchester.ac.uk/investigations/2
24th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media
Hypertext 2013

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Challenging Information Foraging Theory: Screen Reader Users are not Always Driven by Information Scent

  • 1. Challenging Information Foraging Theory: Screen Reader Users are not Always Driven by Information Scent 24th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media Hypertext 2013 Markel Vigo1 & Simon Harper2 University of Manchester (UK) 1: @markelvigo 2: @sharpic markel.vigo@manchester.ac.uk simon.harper@manchester.ac.uk http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.695073
  • 2. Problem • We do not know all the navigation tactics employed by screen reader users • Key to build navigation models • Lack of navigation models for screen reader users ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 2
  • 3. Goal • Bridge the gap on the lack of knowledge on navigation tactics • Survey existing navigation models (for sighted user) • Inform navigation models to make robust models • Consider coping strategies ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 3
  • 4. Navigation models • High certainty about a constrained universe • Predict user behaviour • Interaction models: GOMS, KLM • Evaluation of interfaces • Often used in research settings ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 4
  • 5. Navigation models • Built on Information Foraging Theory (IFT) – Web page ≈ information patch – User ≈ consumer • Link selection= • Information scent (IS) measures the relevance of proximal cues that lead towards distal goals ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 Max E(Info_Value) E(Cost) é ë ê ù û ú 5
  • 6. Navigation models • Models for sighted user differ on – The conceptualisation of information scent – On the strategy for page reading • Few empirical studies are based on link selection or navigation strategies • Low predictive power ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 6
  • 7. Who are screen reader users • Blind users • Low vision users • Potentially generalisable to users of auditory interfaces: – Applications on the move: car, walking, cycling – Situationally disabled users ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 7
  • 8. How do screen readers navigate • What do we know so far? • Behaviours occurring on ideal situations • How is the navigation when encountering: – Accessibility barriers – Design issues – Usability problems ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 8
  • 9. Stereotypical behaviours ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 4. Main content 5. Banner 3. Primary navigation links 6. 2ndary navigation links 7. Footer 8. Miscellaneous bottom links 1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 3. Primary navigation links 4. Main content 1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 3. Primary navigation links 4. Main content (a) Listening to content (b) Exhaustive scanning 9
  • 10. Stereotypical behaviours ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 4. Main content 5. Banner 3. Primary navigation links 6. 2ndary navigation links 7. Footer 8. Miscellaneous bottom links H 1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 3. Primary navigation links 4. Main content (d) Information scent driven gambling scanning: headings navigation H H H H H1. Miscellaneous top links 2. Mast header 3. Primary navigation links 4. Main content (c) Gambling scanning: skip line navigation skip 6 lines skip 5 lines skip 5 lines skip 5 lines 10
  • 11. Analysis of coping tactics • Secondary analysis of 2 user studies – Ethnographic longitudinal – User test • 17 users • Isolated 9 coping tactics grouped by – Link selection tactics – Exploration tactics – Navigation tactics ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 11
  • 12. Link selection tactics T1: Deliberately clicking on low scented links • Accessibility problems: – “I'm just going to click on one of these things, I don’t know what it is for ” • Information overload: – “when I was listening I heard the target link... you can have 30 or 230 links that you have to sit and listen to! ” ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 12
  • 13. Link selection tactics T2: Clicking on any link • When coming across unexpected functionalities or content – On a linked keyword search where search box expected: “does not tell me where to do this ” – On a SERP that did not contain expected results: “found a few links, none directly what I want ” ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 13
  • 14. Intra-page exploration tactics T3: Escaping from useless or inaccessible content by tabbing down T4: Fast tab/arrow down the page without completely listening to content – By default – On familiar pages – On content arranged according to some criterion ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 14
  • 15. Intra-page exploration tactics T5: Gaining orientation • By going to the top of the page – “not sure where I am...if in doubt go back to the beginning ” • Users pay more attention in the second reading ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 15
  • 16. Inter-page navigation tactics T6: Backtracking to a shelter • When user mobility is reduced – Getting stuck: “I seem to have come to a dead end here” – Looping behaviours: “I’ve got back to shorts again...shorts again!” ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 16
  • 17. Inter-page navigation tactics T7: Re-checking • Fast revisitations as reassurance mechanisms T8: Retracing • Users retrace their steps from a shelter ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 17
  • 18. Withdrawal T9: Giving up • Provoked by sequence of failures and unsuccessful interactions. • Observed on users who navigate with trouble and encounter an obstacle different to ones experienced. • E.g.: encountering accessibility barriers after escaping from a loop of pages ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 18
  • 19. Implications Informing navigation models • Navigation models for sighted users mimic screen reader user behaviour in ordinary circumstances • To cover extraordinary circumstances minor modifications are needed: – Gaining orientation (T5) – Re-tracing (T8) ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 19
  • 20. Implications Challenging established conceptions • In ordinary circumstances IS is a reliable indicator • In extraordinary circumstances users are not driven by IS but escape from problems – Click on low scented (t1) or any link (t2) – Fast tabbing down (t3, t4) – Backtracking to a shelter (t6) ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 20
  • 21. Implications Challenging established conceptions • IFT: a hyperlink will be selected when the tradeoff between information gaining and cost of accessing is low • SR users: cost of accessing is minimised at the expenses of gaining low quality information • Alternatively, SR users have low satisficing levels: any web patch is good enough ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 21 Max E(Info_Value) E(Cost) é ë ê ù û ú
  • 22. Implications Challenging established conceptions • This behaviour reminds of that of animals making risk-sensitive foraging decisions – Risk prone individuals: those undergoing extreme situations take the risk of selecting low scented link (t1,t2) – Risk averse individuals: less severe problems take a more conservative strategy by moving to another web patch (t3, t4, t6) ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 22
  • 23. Implications Challenging established conceptions • IFT: users leave a website when the scent of the current page is below the average of the pages visited • SR users give up after overcoming a number of problematic interactions • We have 2 thresholds: information scent and frustration threshold ACM Hypertext 20132 May 2013 23
  • 24. Follow up 2 May 2013 24 Contact @markelvigo | markel.vigo@manchester.ac.uk Presentation DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.695073 Datasets http://wel-data.cs.manchester.ac.uk/investigations/2 24th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media Hypertext 2013