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Home > Business Plan > Appendix 3
Used with permission of the National Information Standards Organization (NISO).
Standards Committee AQ Members
ANSI/NISO Z39.86-2002
ISSN: 1041-5653
Abstract: This standard defines the format and content of the electronic file set that comprises a digital talking book (DTB) and establishes a limited set of requirements for DTB playback devices. It uses established and new specifications to delineate the structure of DTBs whose content can range from XML text only, to text with corresponding spoken audio, to audio with little or no text. DTBs are designed to make print material accessible and navigable for blind or otherwise print-disabled persons.
An American National Standard Developed by the National Information Standards Organization
Approved March 6, 2002, by the American National Standards Institute
Copyright ©2002 by the National Information Standards Organization.
All rights reserved under international and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. For
noncommercial purposes only this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or
by any means without prior permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries regarding
commercial reproduction or distribution should be addressed to NISO Press, 4733 Bethesda
Avenue, Suite 300, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA.
ISSN: 1041-5653 National Information Standards Series
ISBN: 1-880124-52-1
(This foreword is not a part of ANSI/NISO Z39.86-2002, Specifications for the Digital Talking Book. It is included for information only.)
This standard presents specifications for digital talking books (DTBs) for blind, visually impaired, physically handicapped, learning-disabled, or otherwise print-disabled readers. For many years, "talking books" have been made available to print-disabled readers on analog media such as phonograph records and audiocassettes. These media serve their users well in providing human-speech recordings of a wide array of print material in increasingly robust and cost-effective formats. However, analog media are limited in several respects when compared to a print book. First, they are by their nature linear presentations, which leave much to be desired when reading reference works, textbooks, magazines, and other materials that are often accessed randomly. In contrast, digital media offer readers the ability to move around in a book or magazine as freely as (and more efficiently than) a sighted reader flips through a print book. Second, analog recordings do not allow users to interact with the book by placing bookmarks or highlighting material. A DTB offers this capability, storing the bookmarks and highlights separate from, but associated with, the DTB itself. Third, talking book users have long complained that they do not have access to the spelling of the words they hear. As will be explained below, some DTBs will include a file containing the full text of the work, synchronized with the audio presentation, thereby allowing readers to locate specific words and hear them spelled. Finally, analog audio offers readers only one version of the document. If, for example, a book contains footnotes, they are either read where referenced, which burdens the casual reader with unwanted interruptions, or grouped at a location out of the flow of the text, making them difficult for interested readers to access. A DTB allows the user to easily skip over or read footnotes. The Digital Talking Book offers the print-disabled user a significantly enhanced reading experience -- one that is much closer to that of the sighted reader using a print book.
The DTB goes far beyond the limits imposed on analog audio books because it can include not just the audio rendition of the work, but the full textual content and images as well. Because the textual content file is synchronized with the audio file, a DTB offers multiple sensory inputs to readers, a great benefit to, for example, learning-disabled readers. Some visually impaired readers may choose to listen to most of the book, but find that inspecting the images provides information not available in the narrative flow. Others may opt to skip the audio presentation altogether and instead view the text file via screen-enlarging software. Braille readers may prefer to read some or all of the document via a refreshable Braille display device connected to their DTB player and accessing the textual content file.
Digital Talking Books are not tied to a single distribution medium. CD-ROMs will be used first but DTBs will be portable to any digital distribution medium capable of handling the large files associated with digital audio recordings. Regardless of how a DTB is distributed, however, it will normally be in the context of a digital rights management system.
This standard describes the various files that make up a DTB and specifies how each must be formatted. The initiative behind this document grew from a desire to standardize DTB file structures in the hope that it might prevent a recurrence of the multiple formats currently used for talking books throughout the world. This document benefited greatly from the work of the DAISY Consortium, whose members had broken much of the ground covered in this standard and who contributed enormously to the solution of the many problems encountered.
3M
Jerry Karel
Susan Boettcher (Alt)
American Association of Law Libraries
Robert L. Oakley
Mary Alice Baish (Alt)
American Chemical Society
Robert S. Tannehill, Jr.
American Library Association
Paul J. Weiss
American Society for Information Science and Technology
Mark H. Needleman
American Society of Indexers
Judith Gibbs
Jacqueline Rodebaugh (Alt)
American Theological Library Association
Myron Chace
ARMA International
Diane Carlisle
Armed Forces Medical Library
Diane Zehnpfennig
Emily Court (Alt)
Art Libraries Society of North America
David L. Austin
AIIM International
Betsy A. Fanning
Association of Jewish Libraries
Caroline R. Miller
Elizabeth Vernon (Alt)
Association of Research Libraries
Duane E. Webster
Julia Blixrud (Alt)
BiblioMondo Inc.
Martin Sach
Book Industry Communication
Brian Green
Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
Michael Cairns
Matthew Dunie (Alt)
Checkpoint Systems, Inc.
Paul Simon
College Center for Library Automation
J. Richard Madaus
Ann Armbrister (Alt)
Congressional Information Service, Inc.
Robert Lester
devine, Inc.
Robert Boissy
Elsevier Science
Anthony Ross
John Mancia (Alt)
Endeavor Information Systems, Inc.
Verne Coppi
Cindy Miller (Alt)
epixtech, Inc.
John Bodfish
Ricc Ferante (Alt)
Ex Libris
James Steenbergen
Carl Grant (Alt)
Follett Corporation
D. Jeffrey Blumenthal
Don Rose (Alt)
Fretwell-Downing Informatics
Robin Murray
Gale Group
Katherine Gruber
Justine Carson (Alt)
Gaylord Information Systems
William Schickling
Linda Zaleski (Alt)
GCA Research Institute
Jane Harnad
H.W. Wilson Company
Ann Case
Information Use Management & Policy Institute
Charles McClure
John Carlo Bertot (Alt)
Infotrieve
Jan Peterson
Innovative Interfaces, Inc.
Gerald M. Kline
Sandy Westall (Alt)
Institute for Scientific Information
The International DOI Foundation
Norman Paskin
Library Binding Institute
Donald Dunham
The Library Corporation
Mark Wilson
Nancy Capps (Alt)
Library of Congress
Winston Tabb
Sally H. McCallum (Alt)
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Richard E. Luce
Lucent Technologies
M.E. Brennan
Medical Library Association
Nadine P. Ellero
Carla J. Funk (Alt)
MINITEX
Cecelia Boone
William DeJohn (Alt)
Modern Language Association
Daniel Bokser
Cameron Bardrick (Alt)
Motion Picture Association of America
William M. Baker
Axel aus der Muhlen (Alt)
Music Library Association
Lenore Coral
Mark McKnight (Alt)
National Agricultural Library
Gary K. McCone
National Archives and Records Administration
Mary Ann Hadyka
National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services
Marion Harrell
National Library of Medicine
Betsy L. Humphreys
Nylink
Mary-Alice Lynch
Jane Neale (Alt)
OASIS
OCLC, Inc.
Donald J. Muccino
Openly Informatics
Eric Hellman (Alt)
Proquest Information and Learning
Todd Fegan
James Brei (Alt)
Recording Industry Association of America
Linda R. Bocchi
Michael Williams (Alt)
Research Libraries Group
Lennie Stovel
Joan Aliprand (Alt)
SIRS Mandarin, Inc.
Leonardo Lazo
Harry Kaplanian (Alt)
Sirsi Corporation
Greg Hathorn
Slavko Manojlovich (Alt)
Society for Technical Communication
Annette Reilly
Kevin Burns (Alt)
Society of American Archivists
Lisa Weber
Special Libraries Association
Marcia Lei Zeng
Triangle Research Libraries Network
Jordan M. Scepanski
Mona C. Couts (Alt)
U.S. Department of Commerce
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Office of Information Services
U.S. Department of Defense
Defense Technical Information Center
Gopalakrishnan Nair
Jane L. Cohen (Alt)
U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science
Denise Davis
VTLS Inc.
Vinod Chachra
At the time NISO approved this standard, the following individuals served on its Board of Directors:
Beverly P. Lynch, Chair
University of California, Los Angeles
Jan Peterson, Vice Chair/Chair-Elect
Infotrieve, Inc.
Donald J. Muccino, Immediate Past Chair
OCLC, Inc.
Jan Peterson, Treasurer
Infotrieve, Inc.
Patricia R. Harris, Executive Director
National Information Standards Organization
Pieter S. H. Bolman
Elsevier Science
Priscilla Caplan
Florida Center for Library Automation
Carl Grant
Ex Libris (USA), Inc.
Brian Green
BIC/EDItEUR
Jose-Marie Griffiths
University of Pittsburgh
Richard E. Luce
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Sally McCallum
Library of Congress
Norman Paskin
The International DOI Foundation
Steven Puglia
U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
Albert Simmonds
OCLC, Inc.
Standards Committee AQ on Digital Talking Books had the following members at the time this standard was approved:
Mr. Donald J. Breda
American Council of the Blind
Mr. George Brummell
Blinded Veterans Association
Mr. John Bryant
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Glen Cavanaugh
Telex Communications, Inc.
Mr. Curtis Chong
World Blind Union
Mr. Thomas Kjellberg Christensen
DAISY Consortium and the Danish National Library for the Blind
Mr. John Cookson
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Keith Creasy
American Printing House for the Blind
Mr. Frank Kurt Cylke
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Jack Decker
American Printing House for the Blind
Dr. Judith Dixon
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Jim Dust
Telex Communications, Inc.
Dr. Michael Gosse
National Federation of the Blind
Mr. Luis Gutierrez
American Foundation for the Blind
Mr. Mark Hakkinen
Japanese Society for the Rehabilitation of Persons with Disabilities
Mr. John Hedges
American Printing House for the Blind
Ms. Vivian Seki
Hadley School for the Blind
Ms. Rosemary Kavanagh
Canadian National Institute for the Blind
Mr. George Kerscher
Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic and DAISY Consortium
Mr. Wells "Brad" Kormann
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Ms. Kathie Korpolinski
Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic
Mr. Dominic Labbé
VisuAide, Inc.
Ms. Mary-Frances Laughton
Assistive Devices Industry Office
Industry Canada
Mr. Thomas McLaughlin
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Michael Moodie, Chair
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Ms. Freddie Peaco
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Mr. Gilles Pepin
VisuAide, Inc.
Mr. Lloyd Rasmussen
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Ms. Janina Sajka
American Foundation for the Blind
Mr. Rudy Savage
Talking Book Publishers, Inc.
Mr. Larry Skutchan
American Printing House for the Blind
Ms. Linda Stetson
Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library Agencies
American Library Association
Mr. George Stockton
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
Ms. Karen Taylor
Canadian National Institute for the Blind
(This section is informative.)
A digital talking book (DTB) is a collection of electronic files arranged to present information to the target population via alternative media, namely, human or synthetic speech, refreshable Braille, or visual display, e.g., large print. When these files are created and assembled into a DTB in accordance with this standard, they make possible a wide range of features such as rapid, flexible navigation; bookmarking and highlighting; keyword searching; spelling of words on demand; and user control over the presentation of selected items (e.g., footnotes, page numbers, etc.). Such features enable readers with visual and physical disabilities to access the information in DTBs flexibly and efficiently, and allow sighted users with learning or reading disabilities to receive the information through multiple senses. For a full discussion of these capabilities, see the "Document Navigation Features List" [Navigation Features], the user requirements document on which this standard was based. A document written during the development of this standard,Theory Behind the DTBook DTD [DTBook Theory], also describes the navigational capabilities of a DTB in some detail. The content of DTBs will range from audio alone, through a combination of audio, text, and images, to text alone. Section 13 describes these various types of DTBs.
DTB players will also be produced with a variety of capabilities. The simplest might be portable devices with audio-only capabilities. More complex portable players could include text-to-speech capabilities as well as audio output for recorded human speech. The most comprehensive playback systems are expected to be PC-based, supporting visual and audio output, text-to-speech capability, and output to a Braille display. The Playback Device Features List [Player Features] mentioned above presents the committee's priorities for a range of functions across three types of playback devices.
The files comprising a DTB fall into ten categories, as described below:
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Posted on 2011-01-10