Date post: | 01-Apr-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | alexys-shutter |
View: | 215 times |
Download: | 0 times |
The Power to Change Lives
David Wood WBU/EBUZagreb, December 2013
Some possible objectives for the meeting?
• Discuss the need and options for access systems.
• Examine relevant case studies.• Discuss options for possible ‘roadmap’ for
access services• Discuss options for funding. • Prepare conclusions. • Your suggestions?
Why do we all consume media?
• To help us find our ‘identity• Where do I ‘fit’ in society?• Which groups do I belong to?• What is our national identity?• What is happening in the world? • Can I be diverted for a while?• Can I identify with characters in the drama?• What is the day to day information I need?
•Those with disabilities can need these even more than those without disabilities.
Audience Communities with Disabilities and Special Needs
• Blindness• Deafness• The Elderly• Learning difficulties
• Motor impairments• Attention Deficit Disorder• Autism• Dyslexia• Charge syndrome
• Cued Speech• Spina Bifida• Stuttering• Traumatic Brain Injury• Mental Handicap• Gifted
Means to serve the disabled communities using the media• Special programmes• Include portrayal of disabled people.• Greater involvement by the disabled in
programme making and the media.• Measures to make all programmes more
accessible• Society may have to ‘prioritize’ disabilities.
The fact that ‘access services’ are an important ‘cause’ is clear.
But broadcasters face funding dilemmas.
Where should broadcasters best spend their funds and energy?
• More and better access services for those with disabilities?
• Greener broadcasting?• Transition to IT programme production?• Infrastructure for Internet delivery?• Transition to HDTV and UHDTV?• Higher cost majority programming?• More linguistic minority programming?
Today we have a range of media delivery tools
• Normal (SDTV) broadcasting• HDTV broadcasting• Interactive broadcast applications• FM and digital radio• Broadband VoD• Broadband interactive applications• Mobile phones• Broadcasting to handhelds
Options today for Access Services• Broadcast ServicesBroadcast Services
• Subtitles • Audio Descriptions • Audio local language sub-titles • Signing overlay • Clean audio (broadcast format)• Radio to text conversion• Web servicesWeb services
• Transcripts and playback – ‘script mining’ Transcripts and playback – ‘script mining’ • Receiver featuresReceiver features
• User-friendly receivers • Audio rate control• Clean audio (receiver format)• Spoken programme guides
And higher quality helps too....• HDTV helps people with moderate sight
disabilities• UHDTV will help even more• 3DTV brings to light correctable sight
problems • The use of ‘loudness’ control helps audio
descriptions and spoken subtitles..
One local example: Script mining using the web – developed in Slovenia
There are many tools available, but...
The menu needed for access services...
• The financial means to generate the service• The staff skills needed, and ‘high quality’. • The appropriate equipment in users hands• Awareness of the services by users.
The ‘business’ of media
What makes media services successful?
• The Old Factors• Price• Content available• Furniture value• Image/Sound Quality• Usability• Continuous Externalities
• The New Elements• Playback failure• Social context• Contiguous Externalities• Prior experiences/Expectations• Personal skills available
The Interactive Generation16-to-34 years’ old
The Inactive Generation34-to-David Wood years’ old
The starting new media problem: create a ‘virtuous circle’
Viewer experience
Media content
Finance
Which finance model?
Level 1 serviceLevel 1 service
Level 3 service
Level 2 service
Community at large. Conventional income (licence, grant, advertising).
Significant groups. Partial funding from conventional income.
Modest groups. Self financing.
The UN Convention (UN CRPD)• Signatories “shall take appropriate measures to
ensure that persons with disabilities enjoy access to television programmes, etc
• FG-AVA interpretation: 1. Gradually make subtitling and audio descriptions
available for all significant programmes over the next ten years.
2..Gradually make signing, audio rate control. Clean audio, and auxiliary text for radio over the next 15 years.
The Power to Change Lives.• Today, media services make ‘some’ provisions for the
disabled and elderly communities.• Either special programs can be made for these
communities or programmes for the general audience can include features which help them to follow.
• Both are needed, and welcomed, but could a global view of ‘Special Needs’ and the totality of media tools help? Are we doing as much as we could? Do we have the priorities right?
• Technology and media has the power to change lives.
Extract from FG-AVA reports
“We observe that the greatest barrier today to the wider use of access systems is the lack of an economic basis for providing the services. Broadcasters and content providers need to be able to finance the provision of the services. Creative and innovative methods of doing so are needed.”