Illustration of ux designers making a wireframe

Applying Accessibility Heuristics to a Wireframe

Join Denis Boudreau and Aparna Pasi, two of our UX accessibility experts. They will walk you through the fundamentals of a design review process for accessibility, based on the set of 10 accessibility-focused heuristics introduced in the previous webinar session.

In this webinar, you will learn about the following accessibility heuristics:

  • Navigating and wayfinding: Users can easily navigate, find content, and determine where they are at all times within the system.
  • Structures and semantics of a page: Users can make sense of the structure of the content on each page and understand how to operate within the system.
  • Color contrast and legibility: Text and other meaningful information can be easily distinguished and read by users of the system.
  • Language and readability: Content on the page can easily be read and understood by users of the system.
  • Error prevention and error states: Interactive controls (i.e. form elements, widgets, etc.) have persistent, meaningful instructions to help prevent mistakes and provide users with clear error states which indicate what the problems are – and how to fix them – whenever errors are returned.
  • Predictability and consistency: The purpose of each element is predictable, and how each element relates to the system as a whole is clear and meaningful, to avoid confusion for the users.
  • Alternatives for visual and auditory content: Purely visual or auditory content that conveys information (i.e. images, icons, videos, notification sounds, etc.) has text-based alternatives for users who can’t see or hear.
  • Account for multiple interaction methods: Users can efficiently interact with the system using the input method of their choosing (i.e. mouse, keyboard, touch, etc.).
  • Provide enough time and preserve information: Users are given enough time to complete tasks and do not lose information if their time (i.e. a session) runs out.
  • Control of movement and flashing: Elements on the page that move, flash, or animate in other ways can be stopped, and do not distract or harm the users.

Watch Nowfor the Applying Accessibility Heuristics to a Wireframe webinar

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About Deque Systems

Deque (pronounced dee-cue) stands for digital equality. For over 20 years, our software, services and training have helped eliminate billions of accessibility barriers from websites, mobile apps and other digital content - improving the web for everyone, including people with disabilities.

We work with enterprise-level businesses and organizations to ensure that their sites and mobile apps are accessible. Our axe tools have been downloaded over one billion times by accessibility champions around the world. Our experts have implemented thousands of successful accessibility programs. Our training has impacted over a hundred thousand learners.

Deque is the digital accessibility industry standard.