Captions versus transcripts for online video content

R. Kushalnagar, Walter S. Lasecki, Jeffrey P. Bigham
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

Captions provide deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) users access to the audio component of web videos and television. While hearing consumers can watch and listen simultaneously, the transformation of audio to text requires deaf viewers to watch two simultaneous visual streams: the video and the textual representation of the audio. This can be a problem when the video has a lot of text or the content is dense, e.g., in Massively Open Online Courses. We explore the effect of providing caption history on users' ability to follow captions and be more engaged. We compare traditional on-video captions that display a few words at a time to off-video transcripts that can display many more words at once, and investigate the trade off of requiring more effort to switch between the transcript and visuals versus being able to review more content history. We find significant difference in users' preferences for viewing video with on-screen captions over off-screen transcripts in terms of readability, but no significant difference in users' preferences in following and understanding the video and narration content. We attribute this to viewers' perceived understanding significantly improving when using transcripts over captions, even if they were less easy to track. We then discuss the implications of these results for on-line education, and conclude with an overview of potential methods for combining the benefits of both onscreen captions and transcripts.
在线视频内容的字幕与文本
字幕提供聋人和重听人(DHH)用户访问网络视频和电视的音频组件。虽然听力正常的消费者可以同时观看和收听,但音频到文本的转换需要聋人观众同时观看两个视觉流:音频的视频和文本表示。这可能是一个问题,当视频有很多文字或内容密集,例如,在大规模开放在线课程。我们探索了提供标题历史对用户关注标题和更投入的能力的影响。我们比较了一次显示几个单词的传统视频字幕和一次显示更多单词的非视频字幕,并研究了在文本和视觉之间切换需要更多努力与能够查看更多内容历史之间的权衡。我们发现,用户在观看带有屏幕字幕的视频和观看带有屏幕字幕的视频时,在可读性方面存在显著差异,但在跟踪和理解视频和旁白内容方面,用户的偏好没有显著差异。我们将此归因于当使用文字记录而不是字幕时,观众感知到的理解能力显著提高,即使它们不太容易跟踪。然后,我们讨论了这些结果对在线教育的影响,并总结了结合屏幕字幕和成绩单的好处的潜在方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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