close captioning

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

close captioning (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of closed captioning
    • 1992 March-April, Mental and Physical Disability Law Reporter[1], volume 16, number 2:
      the prison did not have basic assistive devices, including a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), close captioning devices, and visual alarms and signals.
    • 2016 December, April Karen Baptiste, “Can a Research Film Be Considered a Stand-Alone Academic Publication? An Assessment of the Film ‘Climate Change, Voices of the Vulnerable: The Fishers’ Plight.’”, in Area 48[2], number 4:
      Additionally, in a research-film, faces being blurred can ensure confidentiality, voices can be changed, and subtitles or close captioning can be used to disguise the identity of an informant who wants to be anonymous.
    • 2018, Bobbie Bushman, “Serving Underserved Populations: Implications from a Model of Successful Services for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children in Public Libraries”, in The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion[3], volume 2, number 3:
      D/HoH people require close captioning and assistive technologies to access electronic and audio-visual information, including news and current events.

References[edit]