====== Surveys for Visually Impaired Participants ====== This chapter outlines the barriers that blind and visually impaired people encounter on the internet. In particular, it explains how these barriers affect designing an online questionnaire. Questionnaires created using SoSci Survey are fundamentally barrier-free. People using a screen reader can change into an accessibility mode during the questionnaire. Some types of questions are different in this mode in order to support the screen reader reading the text. **Note:** If your questionnaire is not suitable for people who are visually impaired due to its methodology (e.g. because it uses visual stimuli), then select the option that the questionnaire is not suitable for screen readers in **Compose Questionnaire** -> //Settings// tab -> Settings //Screen reader mode//. Instead of switching into the accessibility mode, the questionnaire then contains information that can only be seen by screen readers. ===== How Blind and Visually Impaired People Use the Internet ===== In comparison to people with normal vision, blind and visually impaired people have to overcome certain technical obstacles when using the internet. As the internet is largely visually-oriented and is constantly developing technologically, it is a challenge to make proposals and functions accessible for this group. Blind people typically use a screen reader to work on a computer. This is a hard- or software application that reads what is being displayed on the screen from the top left to the bottom right and converts this into Braille or audio. The Braille display located under the keypad presents the contents in Braille and the audio is read out by a synthetic voice. Visually impaired people use different resources depending on the severity of their vision loss. Large screen systems are used mostly by short-sighted people -- software that magnifies screen content up to sixty times. Different operating systems provide further magnification options, e.g. Windows offers mouse cursor magnification, a screen magnifier (which works similarly to magnification software) or increased image contrast. In addition to technical resources that enable access in the first place, it is also particularly important that the internet is user-friendly for these people. All forms of display or audio are the same in that they reflect just one small part of the screen -- perhaps a separate issue. Clarity is therefore more important here than ever before. Elements such as dynamic content, pop-ups, poorly labeled frames, unlabeled graphics, news tickers, flash animations, Java applets, Java scripts, captchas, unclear navigations bars, poor contrast and much more, all present insurmountable obstacles for this user. In general, it is recommended that you choose the most straightforward as possible HTML and CSS based design, without technical features that are frequently unnecessary. ===== Practical Tips for Online Surveys Among Blind and Visually Impaired People ===== In principle, the points mentioned above also apply to online surveys. A simple design should be used: both visually and in terms of programming. For many questions, the SoSci accessibility mode does not use the table framework typically used for display and the standard layouts are also kept simple. If you use your own layout it should be tested for accessibility. It is conducive to the questionnaire's clarity when just one question or two short questions are placed on a page. It is also advisable to put as few links as possible on a page as these have to be read by the screen reader every time and could therefore have a negative impact on the course of the survey. It helps when a longer page is divided into different headings (HTML-Tags ''