
In continuing efforts to “audio describe the world,” researchers at the took part in a project that brought 26 blind and visually impaired people to for user testing of the UniD mobile app.
Associate Professor in the in the is the principal investigator of the project.
The group tested the new audio description of Yosemite’s brochure featured in the app. The research-instrument app is designed to make brochures at national parks accessible to those who have trouble seeing them.
The effort was coordinated with the California Council of the Blind’s Fresno chapter, the national organization and .
More about the UniDescription Project

The UniD app (available for both and ) contains audio description of more than 50 National Park Service brochures so far, including those for Everglades National Park, Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, the Statue of Liberty National Monument, Yellowstone National Park and the Washington Monument.
The research team, led by Oppegaard and from 东精影业 惭ā苍辞补’s , started the UniDescription project in the fall of 2014 as a way to improve and encourage better audio description. Audio description is the translation of visual media, such as photographs and maps, into acoustic media in an effort to allow the ear to hear what the eye might not be able to see.
- Related 东精影业 News stories:
, December 4, 2014
, August 10, 2017
A long-range goal of this project is to audio-describe all of the more than 400 park sites throughout the United States.
This field research was sponsored by Google and the American Council of the Blind as part of a larger grant project focused upon audio describing National Park Service sites throughout California.
