VertaaUX Articles
From Rule Engines to Evidence Graphs
Explain why the next generation of quality tools will connect DOM, screenshots, flow history, and issue recurrence instead of scoring pages in isolation.
Last updated June 22, 2026
Accessibility and UX evaluation are moving beyond single reports and one-off audits. The deeper shift is toward systems that combine deterministic checks, probabilistic signals, and human review into one operational loop.
Single checks are useful, but they do not explain system behavior. Evidence graphs are a more realistic model because they connect structure, visuals, task context, and change history into one decision surface.
The useful question is not whether automation works. It is where it works, where it fails, and how teams should use it responsibly.
Single checks are useful, but they do not explain system behavior. Evidence graphs are a more realistic model because they connect structure, visuals, task context, and change history into one decision surface. VertaaUX is already closer to an evidence graph than a plain scanner when it combines rule findings, layout clues, clarity signals, and history into one operational view instead of one page-level verdict.
What is changing
That shift matters because product teams do not fix isolated warnings. They fix patterns, components, and release regressions that appear across time, teams, and templates.
A richer evidence model also makes it easier to separate certainty from probability. Some nodes are hard facts. Others are risk signals that should influence review order rather than declare truth.
What automation and models are getting better at
- Rule engines already generate high-confidence facts that can anchor a larger graph.
- Screenshots, layout signals, and flow sequencing add context that plain DOM analysis cannot provide on its own.
- Historical recurrence lets teams see whether a finding is a one-off regression or a systemic quality pattern.
What not to overclaim
- Graphs can still become opaque if teams stop explaining which parts are deterministic and which are interpretive.
- Business context, customer impact, and remediation trade-offs still require human ownership.
- Teams need governance on how evidence is weighted or they will create fake precision instead of real trust.
What teams should adopt now
- Keep deterministic findings explicit and traceable as the base layer of the system.
- Add screenshot, layout, and journey context only where it improves prioritization and explanation.
- Track recurrence over time so product teams can focus on system debt rather than isolated clean-up.
- Expose weighting and confidence clearly whenever evidence is aggregated into one score or summary.
Treat as mature: high-confidence signals that can already support ops decisions.
That shift matters because product teams do not fix isolated warnings. They fix patterns, components, and release regressions that appear across time, teams, and templates.
Treat as useful: ideas worth piloting before they become platform defaults.
Graphs can still become opaque if teams stop explaining which parts are deterministic and which are interpretive.
Do not say: that a model has replaced task-based testing or human judgment.
Capability map
| Capability | Useful now | Needs caution |
|---|---|---|
| Pattern detection | Rule engines already generate high-confidence facts that can anchor a larger graph. | Do not confuse signals with proof |
| Workflow impact | That shift matters because product teams do not fix isolated warnings. They fix patterns, components, and release regressions that appear across time, teams, and templates. | Needs real operational testing |
| Human replacement claims | Not recommended | Graphs can still become opaque if teams stop explaining which parts are deterministic and which are interpretive. |
How VertaaUX fits
VertaaUX is already closer to an evidence graph than a plain scanner when it combines rule findings, layout clues, clarity signals, and history into one operational view instead of one page-level verdict.
Reading Progress
0% complete
On This Page