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ABOUT CAPTIONING

Closed captioning displays the dialogue, narration and sound effects of a video program as words on a television screen, similar to subtitles on a movie. Unlike subtitled movies, closed captioning allows the viewer to choose whether or not to display the captions that are transmitted within the broadcast signal in encoded (or closed) form. A decoder built into or attached to a television set is used to "open" the captions and display the words on the TV screen.

NCI developed the closed captioning service to provide 28 million people who are deaf or hard of hearing in the United States with access to the wide range of information and entertainment on television. Millions of other people can also benefit from watching captioning television. These audiences include: people learning English as a second language, young children learning to read, remedial readers, illiterate adults, and people watching television in noisy environments such as restaurants, bars and airports.

More information can be found in this section on how captioning is created, the educational uses of captioning, relevant laws, and other topics for the captioned television audience.

 

[ How it Works] [ Educational Uses ] [ Captioning Terms ] [ Related Laws ] [ Captioning Quality ] [ Supporting Captioning ] [ Captioned Catalog ] [ Decoder Repair and Sales ]