- From: Gregg C Vanderheiden <[email protected]>
- Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2017 11:44:18 -0500
- To: "lisa.seeman" <[email protected]>
- Cc: Alastair Campbell <[email protected]>, Laura Carlson <[email protected]>, GLWAI Guidelines WG org <[email protected]>, public-low-vision-a11y-tf <[email protected]>
- Message-Id: <[email protected]>
This looks like the animation SC - which prevents all of these if they last more than a few seconds. Prohibiting them all together is a problem in that the are often used to bring attention to important things that would otherwise be missed — and also used to provide cognitive assistance (how to do things etc.) The time limit keeps them from preventing use — even if they might delay it a bit for people who are so distracted that the things that are intended to catch their attention — would trap it if they continued. Gregg Gregg C Vanderheiden [email protected] > On Feb 14, 2017, at 11:24 AM, lisa.seeman <[email protected]> wrote: > > That helps, but the worst thing is moving content or a flashing light or moving content (especially that has a higher contrast) > The speed is not an issue and the size of the screen is also not as big an issue as for epilepsy > > I am just going from what I know from my daughter who also has a focusing issue, so it might need better research > What I do know is content with any flashing (what ever the size) or moving will hurt her > > All the best > > Lisa Seeman > > LinkedIn <http://il.linkedin.com/in/lisaseeman/>, Twitter <https://twitter.com/SeemanLisa> > > > > > ---- On Mon, 13 Feb 2017 23:59:45 +0200 Alastair Campbell <[email protected]> wrote ---- > > I was wondering if we have a SC for severe photophobia -people who get pain > > from intense light (any size) and flashing (any size) > > The text adaptation one covers colours of foreground/background text, and there is the current 2.3.1 Three Flashes, with it's threshold. > > They would not cover a bright image/video, or a small flashing area though. > > Is that something best dealt with at the OS/hardware level? Presumably to get to a website you'd have to open a browser, which has a large white canvas... So toning down brightness & whites would be important for general use. > > > > There should be a semantics to mark any section of elements with flashing > > moving or blinking and these of these so that they can be blocked and make > > sure that low contrast can not be overridden > > Possibly, but if you can override it at all, you should be able to override it whether it has semantics or not. > > -Alastair > >
Received on Tuesday, 14 February 2017 16:44:56 UTC