Let me say first that I commend you for devoting attention to this issue in your work.
I am not an accessibility expert myself, but there are multiple sources around the web for guidelines about accessibility in general and image alt text in particular. One of the ones with more authority is the W3C's Web-Content Accessibility Guidelines. The most recent version is WCAG 2.1, released earlier this year. Its very first point is
Information and user interface components must be presentable to users in ways they can perceive.
The first sub-point is about providing text alternatives, and its primary provision is
All non-text content that is presented to the user has a text alternative that serves the equivalent purpose,
with some exceptions and caveats that you should read and consider (emphasis added).
That nicely summarizes the thrust of my earlier comment, about the choice of alt text being contextual. It needs to be driven by context in order to serve the equivalent purpose of the image. For example, if I post an image of Mickey Mouse as Steamboat Willie, the context determines whether the purpose is to convey the idea of "Mickey Mouse" or "Steamboat Willie" or "cartoon mouse" or "mouse" or ....
But that does not mean that more is better. Extraneous detail in alt text makes it less effective. The point is not to convey as much information about the image as possible; rather, it is to serve as a stand-in for the image.
Aside: frequent SO users will perhaps appreciate these conformance criteria especially well:
If the technologies being used can achieve the visual presentation, text is used to convey information rather than images of text
, with some caveats (emphasis added), and
Images of text are only used for pure decoration or where a particular presentation of text is essential to the information being conveyed.
As for your particular example, you should appreciate at this point that we can't critique your alt text very much without at least inferring some context. But there are a few things I can say:
Comments and another answer instruct you to avoid leading the text with "Description" because of the possible behavior of screen readers, but there is a more fundamental reason to avoid it: that tag does not contribute to the purpose the image serves. Alternative means alternative. You're trying to provide a substitute for the image, not information about the image.
Your "Top segment shows" and "Bottom segment shows" wording falls in about the same area. You are describing the image, but the description probably does not serve as a good substitute for the image. It should focus on details relevant to the image's purpose.
The purpose served by this image in your particular case is unclear, so I can't recommend specific alternative text for it, but something along the lines of "Screenshot of Video Player, highlighting the main playback area" might be suitable.
Am I going about this in the correct manner? Am I being a bit too detailed with my descriptions?
I think you have framed the problem incorrectly. To recap, the point is not to provide a description of the image, but rather to provide a substitute for the image. That may well involve elements of description, but if you are guided by the principle of providing alternative text that serves the same purpose as the image, then I think questions about how much detail and which details to include will largely go away.