Yes, echolocation is useful, to differing degrees for various people, but 
riding a bike???????!!!!!

I hope they do not use it to claim driving license!!!!

Rajesh

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Amit Bhatt
Sent: Tuesday, February 12, 2008 8:46 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Blind taught to 'see' like a bat

Although the below news is not the latest to catch-up with, however some of us 
may find it intriguing.
Blind taught to 'see' like a bat

Mark Macaskill

BLIND British children are to be taught a pioneering bat-style echolocation 
technique to visualise their surroundings.

The children are learning how to build up detailed images of the world around 
them by clicking their tongue and interpreting the sound as it echoes back.

The technique is used by animals such as bats, dolphins and whales to navigate 
and hunt in the dark.

Bats are able to manoeuvre around caves and catch tiny insects on the wing by 
emitting short bursts of high-pitched noise and reading the sound waves as
they bounce back to their highly evolved ears.

There is emerging evidence that blind people can harness their sense of hearing 
- which is often more acute - to interpret reflected sound and create detailed
mental images of their surroundings, including the distance, size and density 
of objects.

The technique is being piloted in Glasgow, where 10 children aged five to 17 
are being taught by staff from Visibility, one of the city's oldest charities
for the blind. The children are learning how to make the clicking sound and how 
to use the technique even in noisy urban areas, including the underground
system.

Blind people in America, where human echolocation was pioneered, have learnt to 
differentiate between people, trees, buildings and parked cars by interpreting
the pitch and timbre of the echo they produce. Practitioners say they can 
determine the height, density and shape of objects up to 100ft away.

People using echolocation can determine the distance they are from an object by 
the length of time it takes for the sound to travel back. Its position can
be established by whether the echo hits the left or right ear first. The size 
of an object can be determined by the intensity of the echo. A smaller object
reflects less of the sound wave. The object's direction of movement can be 
established by the pitch of the echo, which is lower if it is moving away from
the source.

Echolocation has been endorsed by Professor Gordon Dutton, one of Britain's 
leading paediatric ophthalmologists, who wants the technique to be taught to
blind and visually impaired people across the country. There are about 385,000 
registered blind and partially sighted people in Britain.

"It's very exciting," said Dutton, of the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in 
Glasgow. "I have seen echolocation being used - it's quite stunning. It has
been demonstrated to me that it absolutely works.

"Of course there will be scepticism and doubt but the benefits are without 
question. It will make a massive difference to the lives of blind and visually
impaired people."

The project in Glasgow follows a visit last year by Dan Kish, a 41-year-old 
blind man from California, who pioneered the technique. Kish, who runs the 
not-for-profit
organisation World Access for the Blind, has also been commissioned by the 
charity Common Sense to present his method to the families of blind people in
Poole, Dorset.

His command of the technique is such that he can ride a bicycle on public roads 
and distinguish between different types of fruit on trees merely by clicking
his tongue. A video on the website YouTube shows Kish and a number of his 
friends demonstrating their skills.

Ben Underwood, a teenager who lost his sight when he was three, has also become 
a celebrity in America because of his ability to use echolocation to ride
a bike and to go skateboarding.

Although there have been no scientific studies of echolocation, supporters say 
it can hugely improve the lives of blind and partially sighted children.

While using a cane allows blind people to identify obstacles in their path, 
echolocation is said to provide 360-degree "vision" and can give them far 
greater
freedom.

"It's a type of seeing in its own right, which probably uses similar brain 
imaging mechanisms to eyesight," Kish said.

"Students almost invariably become more confident, move faster and participate 
in more activities," he continued. "They show improved posture and regard
themselves as more able to direct themselves through their environment with 
less need for others.

"They are freer, and better able to choose the quality of life they wish to 
achieve, rather than have this chosen for them."

Fiona Sandford, chief executive of Visibility, added: "This is a pioneering 
technique that will transform the lives of young blind children.

"We have trained four visually impaired adults and they are now using their 
skills to train children. We hope to roll this out to adults. I have seen it
being used and it works."

Belgium's federal police use a unit of blind officers specifically for their 
acute sense of hearing, in analysing phone taps and bugged conversations in
investigations of terrorism, drug trafficking and organised crime.

The detectives can separate the voices of different speakers and pick up sonic 
clues such as whether a suspect is in a railway station or a restaurant or
whether the caller is using a land-line or mobile phone. Some officers have 
even identified the make of car suspects are using.

A detective in Antwerp, Sacha van Loo, 36, who is trained in echolocation, 
correctly identified a drug smuggler as Albanian from his accent when sighted
colleagues thought the man was Moroccan.

Hollywood has also depicted the heightened senses of the blind. In the 2003 
film Dare-devil, Ben Affleck plays a New York lawyer, blinded in childhood,
who transforms himself into a masked crime-busting superhero by night, using 
his acute hearing as a "radar sense" to "see" through the dark.
List of 1 items
Have your say
list end

The difference between machine and person is that the person becomes attuned to 
the vagaries of their own clicks, it's like using your hand or using a "waldo"
- you'll always be better with your hands. Also, if two "clickers" get near 
each other, each person will have a different sound to listen to. This IS a
great possibility, and I look forward to "seeing" the results.
And Tom Reid - you'll have better luck with echolocation if the sound 
originates near your ears. The time difference with a cane is noticable.

Michael, Houston, Texas, USA

Totally Blind myself. This is yet another fairy tale. Light travels at 186000 
miles per sec, sound, 700 miles per hour. 30,000 hair cells in ear. Billions
of neurons dedicated to vision. We don't hear ultrasound. Most blind people are 
older and their hearing is consequently reducing. No way is this accurate
enough or quick enough. Use sound all the time. Hit the ground with a stick in 
the snow for instance. Given that you know your environment, you do get
enough sound clues to be able to guess that you are passing a big or small 
object and can tell that something is likely to be a car or bus shelter. You
can not detecd things much below head level. Could never detect holes in ground 
by clicking. This needs properly tested . May provide"Consultants" with
a bit of cash. Try putting money in something more useful.

Tom Reid, London, United Kingdom

Science Fiction got there first. "Dark Universe", D. Galouye, 1962.

Tatiana Covington, Tucson, AZ USA

Cool, but why not build a device that does the clicking? Surely machine 
generated clicks could be louder, more frequent and their pitch could be tuned 
for
optimum performance.

It could even be ultrasonic, with a receiver and an earpiece.

Dragon's den anyone?

D Rochester, Liverpool, UK

Actually, teaching people to click is a better idea, because you can lose a 
device or have it taken from you. Or it may break. And the independence a blind
person will experience will be greater if he is producing the sound himself. I 
think it's a wonderful idea!

Pat, Arizona, USA

This learned technique sounds most interesting and possibly helpful to the 
blind person. It cannot replace the security of the Guide Dog and companions.

Jane Fleming, Peterborough, UK

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3341739.ece
Thanks,

amit Bhatt
To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Notice: The information contained in this e-mail
message and/or attachments to it may contain
confidential or privileged information. If you are
not the intended recipient, any dissemination, use,
review, distribution, printing or copying of the
information contained in this e-mail message
and/or attachments to it are strictly prohibited. If
you have received this communication in error,
please notify us by reply e-mail or telephone and
immediately and permanently delete the message
and any attachments. Thank you

To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to