diff --git a/basic/a11y-extensions.rst b/basic/a11y-extensions.rst index a8916f6c..a8b644b6 100644 --- a/basic/a11y-extensions.rst +++ b/basic/a11y-extensions.rst @@ -76,20 +76,20 @@ to know how an expression should be pronounced. The `Speech` sub-menu includes an option for `Auto Voicing` the expression as it is navigated. When this is selected, the expression will be read by the browser's speech synthesis API, rather than a -screen reader, and the terms will be highlights as they are read. +screen reader, and the terms will be highlighted as they are read. This is useful, for example, for dyslexic users who benefit from the -synchronized highlighting. +synchronized highlighting. `Auto Voicing` can also be toggled using +the |bkey| S |ekey| key. There are a number of different rule sets that can be chosen for translating math to text, where each can have a number of different preferences for how a particular expression is spoken. By default, -MathJax uses the `ClearSpeak`, however, the `Speech` sub-menu allows +MathJax uses `ClearSpeak`, however, the `Speech` sub-menu allows also provides the `MathSpeak` option. Each rule set has several different preference settings; three in the case of MathSpeak, for example, which primarily influence the length -of produced text. `ClearSpeak -`__, +of produced text. ClearSpeak, on the other hand, has a large number of preferences that allow very fine-tuned control over how different types of expressions are spoken. The MathJax menu allows a smart choice of preferences by only