Re: ARIA Graphics Module -- proposed roles hierarchy & data properties

Ameilia,

Your last email is quite helpful.  We have a diverse group and some folks
may not be aware of the dangers of letting user agents interpret data, so I
wanted to articulate what I believe to be acceptable and unacceptable
behaviors and provide reasons for it.

I generally like your proposed automated summaries, most of the charts will
be produced by chart rendering engines that could provide the summary
information. I love the idea of providing users sorted lists, and that
would have to be left to a user agent to create the lists. Except for
situations like box and whisker plots, I don't believe a median and
quartiles will be provided by a chart engine. A user agent should never
calculate statistics since it does not have access to the original data.
Who would be responsible for fixing a reported bug when a user agents
statistic does not match a statistical package's statistic used by a
product?

I don't think it is appropriate for a user agent to slice and dice chart
data. Products that used the chart engines I worked on, let you slice and
dice data via interactivity on the chart, sortable table or through other
means. It was up to the product whether you could drill down using chart
interactivity. Slicing and dicing data by a user agent has the same problem
as creating statistics - the user agent does not have access to the
original data.

I think Amelia and I differ on how far user agents should be able to alter
charts. I favor paths to support colorblind and low vision users, however I
do not believe a user agent needs to understand a graphic's data to do so.
To support changing an aesthetic palette used, a chart could put the text
color and the visualized aesthetic values that appear in data in the chart
and in legends in <defs>. These would functionally be palettes for the
aesthetics and text. Perhaps a media query would tweak the palettes for the
user. Two advantages of this approach are: you can adjust the palettes
without knowledge of the actual data values; and the media query can adjust
things just enough to meet the goals (like improving contrast) without
radically changing the appearance (reds can still look red, blues look
blue) of the chart. You might be able to use a similar technique to create
palettes for sounds and haptic devices. If you want a user agent to alter
palettes (not using a media query), you may have to identify palettes and
significant styles (ie dataPalette, textStyle). In general, a palette does
not have to be ordered (ie low to high) for it to be used, but you may want
an ordered palette if you want to derive a palette for sound or a haptic
devices on the fly.

I think it is fine to provide shortcuts for navigating within charts, like
being able to jump to axes or data without walking every feature. I am not
in favor of user agents visually moving stuff around. Moving panels in a
SPLOM would not be acceptable. I do not favor axes that float and stay
visible when you scroll, that sounds like an application should do that.
Maps can have longitude and latitude marks on the neat line, but floating
latitude/longitude marks may violate the projection and give the user false
information. I believe moving features around or decoupling parts of a
graphic is something for an application to do not a user agent.

I think roles and properties are valuable for creating names that
consistent across authors. For example a role of axis and an aria-gtype of
y should consistently create the same name (my guess would be 'axis y').
The benefit to the user is - they can access charts from different authors
and still know what is an axis. Even when one author uses an aria-gtype of
'y' and another uses an aria-gtype of 'dependent' the user won't have any
more confusion than when one encompassing article talk about a 'y axis' and
another talks about the 'axis for the dependent variable'. Charts do not
have that many well known roles -titles/notes, axis, data, legend, grids,
figures (aka panels or facets), labels, edge (connector) and symbols.
Everything else can be handled ad hoc through descriptions. Likewise
technical drawings have a recognized role for dimension lines and maps have
a recognized role of graticule and can still be covered with the chart
taxonomy.

The aria properties can be valuable in charts. In my examples I used
aria-valuemin and aria-valuemax  on axes, datagroups and dataitems.


                                                              
                                                              
                    Regards,                     Fred         
                                                              
                   Fred Esch                                  
     Accessibility Focal, Watson Solutions                    
    AARB Complex Visualization Working Group                  
                     Chair                                    
        W3C SVG Accessibility Task Force                      
                   IBM Watson                                 
                                                              
                                                              






From:	Amelia Bellamy-Royds <amelia.bellamy.royds@gmail.com>
To:	Fred Esch/Arlington/IBM@IBMUS
Cc:	public-svg-a11y@w3.org
Date:	08/31/2015 01:46 PM
Subject:	Re: ARIA Graphics Module -- proposed roles hierarchy & data
            properties



Fred,

Thank you for your thoughtful comments on this thread [1] and in the mail
where you compared my proposal with your taxonomy [2].  Everyone should
read both e-mails carefully; you bring up many complications we need to
consider.

I whole-heartedly agree that we should avoid any suggestion that user
agents should perform inappropriate statistical analyses of chart data.  We
do not want a browser declaring trendlines or the significance thereof when
that measure may be quite inappropriate for the dataset.  We need to
recognize that data used to generate a chart is often a summary of a much
larger raw data set, and is often cleaned up in ways that reduce precision.

However, I do not believe the alternative is to rely solely on
author-provided descriptions of the data and its patterns.  There are
multiple problems with this approach:
      It expects the author to identify all features worth describing.  It
      does not allow the user to choose which details they are interested
      in.
      If the chart is generated by an automated tool, the text descriptions
      will not necessarily be any better than text descriptions created by
      an automated tool on the user agent/AT.
      Unlike a user-agent tool, an authoring tool will not be customizable
      to the language requirements and other needs of the user.
For these reasons, I would like author-supplied descriptions to be an
enhancement or complement to user-controlled automated summaries.  The
automated summaries would be based on metadata that can easily be inserted
by the authoring tools that generate the chart.  (Because, let's face it,
most SVG charts are created with authoring tools or scripting libraries.)

The automated summaries I am proposing are not analysis, although they
would technically be called summary statistics. They are intended to
describe the features that a sighted user would gather from looking at the
presentation of the data in a chart.  For example:
      The number of axes and other data scales, and the range of values
      they can encode (regardless of whether the data uses this full
      range).
      The number of data groups, and the number of data items within each
      group.
      Which data measurements, on which scales, are available for each
      group or each data item
      The maximum and minimum data values on each scale, either overall or
      for each group, and maybe other non-parametric statistics such as
      median or quartiles.
      The entire data points as a sorted list, according to values on any
      of the scales.
More advanced non-visual AT could perhaps offer a query format, allowing
users to slice the data into subsets based on categorical variables or
ranges of quantitative variables.  For example, the user may want to know
the max, min, and median y-values when the x-value is within a certain
range.  Or the user may want to know at which x-values the y-value falls
within a given range.  Other software, as Doug has demonstrated, could use
auditory encodings to directly represent the data values in sound.

The details of data relationships, as expressed by the properties I
proposed, would also be used for alternative visual presentations (or other
2D presentations, such as embossed books).
      Software that replaces color encodings with different colors,
      patterns, or shading would need access to the data used in the
      existing encoding.  This could be useful for monochrome printing,
      embossing, high-contrast mode, or color-blindness-friendly mode.

      AT that changes the layout of some features needs to know which parts
      of the layout encode information, and how different parts are
      connected.  This could be useful for large print or magnification
      mode, braille/embossed documents, automated translations, and maybe
      even automated adaption to small screens.
It is for these alternative 2D presentations that it is really important to
distinguish between maps, data charts, network graphs, and generic graphics
or diagrams.  When we declare a section of content as a graphical document,
we are saying that layout is no longer a matter of style and formatting, it
is part of the informational content.  The document types for maps, charts,
and network graphs distinguish which aspects of the layout are important
for information.  In combination with the other roles and properties, it
provides the AT with the information to make judicious alterations to the
layout as required.  For example:
      A legend may be moved around so long as it doesn't obscure data items
      and the user can still easily consult it.
      An axis may be repeated if the chart needs to be split across pages,
      or the axis may remain fixed while the data (and other axis) scrolls
      by perpendicular to it.
      A network graph could be extensively re-arranged so long as the
      connections between components are preserved.
In contrast, if the group consensus is that authors should provide all data
in the form of text labels and descriptions, then there is no potential for
software to re-encode data or offer a query feature.  The only purpose for
a complex role taxonomy of parts of a chart would be to support
layout-reorganizing changes, so a much simpler set of roles should be
used.  The label and description ARIA properties, including the new
aria-roledescription property, would be sufficient to distinguish other
features or sub-types of features.  Navigation options (both 2D and
hierarchical) would be the same as for more generic diagrams and structured
drawings, but with the option for non-visual users to jump to axes or to
data.

I hope to hear more opinions and ideas from others,

Best,
Amelia


[1]: https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0034.html
[2]: https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0027.html

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<html><body><p>Ameilia,<br><br>Your last email is quite helpful.  We have a diverse group and some folks may not be aware of the dangers of letting user agents interpret data, so I wanted to articulate what I believe to be acceptable and unacceptable behaviors and provide reasons for it.<br><br>I generally like your proposed automated summaries, most of the charts will be produced by chart rendering engines that could provide the summary information. I love the idea of providing users sorted lists, and that would have to be left to a user agent to create the lists. Except for situations like box and whisker plots, I don't believe a median and quartiles will be provided by a chart engine. A user agent should never calculate statistics since it does not have access to the original data. Who would be responsible for fixing a reported bug when a user agents statistic does not match a statistical package's statistic used by a product? <br><br>I don't think it is appropriate for a user agent to slice and dice chart data. Products that used the chart engines I worked on, let you slice and dice data via interactivity on the chart, sortable table or through other means. It was up to the product whether you could drill down using chart interactivity. Slicing and dicing data by a user agent has the same problem as creating statistics - the user agent does not have access to the original data.<br><br>I think Amelia and I differ on how far user agents should be able to alter charts. I favor paths to support colorblind and low vision users, however I do not believe a user agent needs to understand a graphic's data to do so. To support changing an aesthetic palette used, a chart could put the text color and the visualized aesthetic values that appear in data in the chart and in legends in &lt;defs&gt;. These would functionally be palettes for the aesthetics and text. Perhaps a media query would tweak the palettes for the user. Two advantages of this approach are: you can adjust the palettes without knowledge of the actual data values; and the media query can adjust things just enough to meet the goals (like improving contrast) without radically changing the appearance (reds can still look red, blues look blue) of the chart. You might be able to use a similar technique to create palettes for sounds and haptic devices. If you want a user agent to alter palettes (not using a media query), you may have to identify palettes and significant styles (ie dataPalette, textStyle). In general, a palette does not have to be ordered (ie low to high) for it to be used, but you may want an ordered palette if you want to derive a palette for sound or a haptic devices on the fly.<br> <br>I think it is fine to provide shortcuts for navigating within charts, like being able to jump to axes or data without walking every feature. I am not in favor of user agents visually moving stuff around. Moving panels in a SPLOM would not be acceptable. I do not favor axes that float and stay visible when you scroll, that sounds like an application should do that.  Maps can have longitude and latitude marks on the neat line, but floating latitude/longitude marks may violate the projection and give the user false information. I believe moving features around or decoupling parts of a graphic is something for an application to do not a user agent. <br><br>I think roles and properties are valuable for creating names that consistent across authors. For example a role of axis and an aria-gtype of y should consistently create the same name (my guess would be 'axis y'). The benefit to the user is - they can access charts from different authors and still know what is an axis. Even when one author uses an aria-gtype of 'y' and another uses an aria-gtype of 'dependent' the user won't have any more confusion than when one encompassing article talk about a 'y axis' and another talks about the 'axis for the dependent variable'. Charts do not have that many well known roles -titles/notes, axis, data, legend, grids, figures (aka panels or facets), labels, edge (connector) and symbols. Everything else can be handled ad hoc through descriptions. Likewise technical drawings have a recognized role for dimension lines and maps have a recognized role of graticule and can still be covered with the chart taxonomy.<br><br>The aria properties can be valuable in charts. In my examples I used aria-valuemin and aria-valuemax  on axes, datagroups and dataitems. <br><br><br><br>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"><tr valign="top"><td width="341" valign="bottom"><div align="center"><font size="4">Regards, <br><br>Fred Esch <br>Accessibility Focal, Watson Solutions<br>AARB Complex Visualization Working Group Chair<br>W3C SVG Accessibility Task Force <br></font><img src="cid:1__=8FBBF420DFDBDE958f9e8a93df938690918c8FB@" width="163" height="23" alt="IBM Watson"></div></td><td width="100" valign="bottom"><img src="cid:2__=8FBBF420DFDBDE958f9e8a93df938690918c8FB@" width="115" height="115" alt="Fred" align="bottom"></td></tr></table><br><br><img width="16" height="16" src="cid:3__=8FBBF420DFDBDE958f9e8a93df938690918c8FB@" border="0" alt="Inactive hide details for Amelia Bellamy-Royds ---08/31/2015 01:46:31 PM---Fred, Thank you for your thoughtful comments on this"><font color="#424282">Amelia Bellamy-Royds ---08/31/2015 01:46:31 PM---Fred, Thank you for your thoughtful comments on this thread [1] and in the mail</font><br><br><font size="2" color="#5F5F5F">From:        </font><font size="2">Amelia Bellamy-Royds &lt;amelia.bellamy.royds@gmail.com&gt;</font><br><font size="2" color="#5F5F5F">To:        </font><font size="2">Fred Esch/Arlington/IBM@IBMUS</font><br><font size="2" color="#5F5F5F">Cc:        </font><font size="2">public-svg-a11y@w3.org</font><br><font size="2" color="#5F5F5F">Date:        </font><font size="2">08/31/2015 01:46 PM</font><br><font size="2" color="#5F5F5F">Subject:        </font><font size="2">Re: ARIA Graphics Module -- proposed roles hierarchy &amp; data properties</font><br><hr width="100%" size="2" align="left" noshade style="color:#8091A5; "><br><br><br><font size="4">Fred,</font><br><br><font size="4">Thank you for your thoughtful comments on this thread [1] and in the mail where you compared my proposal with your taxonomy [2].  Everyone should read both e-mails carefully; you bring up many complications we need to consider.</font><br><br><font size="4">I whole-heartedly agree that we should avoid any suggestion that user agents should perform inappropriate statistical analyses of chart data.  We do not want a browser declaring trendlines or the significance thereof when that measure may be quite inappropriate for the dataset.  We need to recognize that data used to generate a chart is often a summary of a much larger raw data set, and is often cleaned up in ways that reduce precision.</font><br><br><font size="4">However, I do not believe the alternative is to rely solely on author-provided descriptions of the data and its patterns.  There are multiple problems with this approach:</font><ul><ul type="disc"><li><font size="4">It expects the author to identify all features worth describing.  It does not allow the user to </font><i><font size="4">choose</font></i><font size="4"> which details they are interested in.</font><li><font size="4">If the chart is generated by an automated tool, the text descriptions will not necessarily be any better than text descriptions created by an automated tool on the user agent/AT.</font><li><font size="4">Unlike a user-agent tool, an authoring tool will not be customizable to the language requirements and other needs of the user.</font></ul></ul><font size="4">For these reasons, I would like author-supplied descriptions to be an </font><i><font size="4">enhancement</font></i><font size="4"> or complement to user-controlled automated summaries.  The automated summaries would be based on metadata that can easily be inserted by the authoring tools that generate the chart.  (Because, let's face it, most SVG charts are created with authoring tools or scripting libraries.)</font><br><br><font size="4">The automated summaries I am proposing are not analysis, although they would technically be called summary statistics. They are intended to describe the features that a sighted user would gather from looking at the presentation of the data in a chart.  For example:</font><ul><ul type="disc"><li><font size="4">The number of axes and other data scales, and the range of values they can encode (regardless of whether the data uses this full range).</font><li><font size="4">The number of data groups, and the number of data items within each group.</font><li><font size="4">Which data measurements, on which scales, are available for each group or each data item</font><li><font size="4">The maximum and minimum data values on each scale, either overall or for each group, and maybe other non-parametric statistics such as median or quartiles.</font><li><font size="4">The entire data points as a sorted list, according to values on any of the scales.</font></ul></ul><font size="4">More advanced non-visual AT could perhaps offer a query format, allowing users to slice the data into subsets based on categorical variables or ranges of quantitative variables.  For example, the user may want to know the max, min, and median y-values when the x-value is within a certain range.  Or the user may want to know at which x-values the y-value falls within a given range.  Other software, as Doug has demonstrated, could use auditory encodings to directly represent the data values in sound.</font><br><br><font size="4">The details of data relationships, as expressed by the properties I proposed, would also be used for alternative visual presentations (or other 2D presentations, such as embossed books).  </font><ul><ul type="disc"><li><font size="4">Software that replaces color encodings with different colors, patterns, or shading would need access to the data used in the existing encoding.  This could be useful for monochrome printing, embossing, high-contrast mode, or color-blindness-friendly mode.  <br></font><li><font size="4">AT that changes the layout of some features needs to know which parts of the layout encode information, and how different parts are connected.  This could be useful for large print or magnification mode, braille/embossed documents, automated translations, and maybe even automated adaption to small screens.</font></ul></ul><font size="4">It is for these alternative 2D presentations that it is really important to distinguish between maps, data charts, network graphs, and generic graphics or diagrams.  When we declare a section of content as a graphical document, we are saying that layout is no longer a matter of style and formatting, it is part of the informational content.  The document types for maps, charts, and network graphs distinguish </font><i><font size="4">which</font></i><font size="4"> aspects of the layout are important for information.  In combination with the other roles and properties, it provides the AT with the information to make judicious alterations to the layout as required.  For example:</font><ul><ul type="disc"><li><font size="4">A legend may be moved around so long as it doesn't obscure data items and the user can still easily consult it.  </font><li><font size="4">An axis may be repeated if the chart needs to be split across pages, or the axis may remain fixed while the data (and other axis) scrolls by perpendicular to it.</font><li><font size="4">A network graph could be extensively re-arranged so long as the connections between components are preserved.  </font></ul></ul><font size="4">In contrast, if the group consensus is that authors should provide all data in the form of text labels and descriptions, then there is no potential for software to re-encode data or offer a query feature.  The only purpose for a complex role taxonomy of parts of a chart would be to support layout-reorganizing changes, so a much simpler set of roles should be used.  The label and description ARIA properties, including the new aria-roledescription property, would be sufficient to distinguish other features or sub-types of features.  Navigation options (both 2D and hierarchical) would be the same as for more generic diagrams and structured drawings, but with the option for non-visual users to jump to axes or to data.</font><br><br><font size="4">I hope to hear more opinions and ideas from others,</font><br><br><font size="4">Best,</font><br><font size="4">Amelia</font><br><br><br><font size="4">[1]: </font><a href="https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0034.html"><u><font size="4" color="#0000FF">https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0034.html</font></u></a><br><font size="4">[2]: </font><a href="https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0027.html"><u><font size="4" color="#0000FF">https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-svg-a11y/2015Aug/0027.html</font></u></a><br><BR>
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Received on Tuesday, 1 September 2015 13:52:32 UTC