Blind People's Other Senses Not More Acute
Blindfolded

Mind-myth no. 2: studies show that the blind's other senses are not more acute, 
but they can learn some amazing skills to compensate, like echolocation.

It's an oft-repeated idea that blind people's other senses compensate for their 
lack of sight. Like the idea that we
only use 10% of our brains
, it is probably repeated because its rosy optimism seems harmless. In fact 
it's a myth with a kernel of truth.

To shoot this myth down we need to make an important distinction. There is a 
difference between having better hearing, and using auditory information more
effectively, which some blind people do to an extraordinary degree. This 
difference is at the root of the myth. Let's have a look at what the studies 
have
found.

Smelling

Studies have compared the threshold at which blind and sighted young people can 
identify smells. Rosenbluth, Grossman and Kaitz (2000), for example, found
no difference in this, nor in blinded and sighted children's ability to 
identify the different smells they were exposed to. The blind children did, 
however,
give a wider range of labels to the smells, suggesting they paid more attention 
to smells.

Hearing

The spatial hearing abilities of blind and sighted individuals were examined by 
Ashmead et al. (1998). They tested how well participants were able to tell
the direction a sound was coming from. In this test the blind children did 
perform better, but only marginally so. Again, this suggests blind children
are making better use of their sense of hearing, not that their sense of 
hearing is ramped up to compensate for lack of sight.

Touching

Perhaps, though, despite not having superior olfactory or auditory powers, 
blind children have a better sense of touch? Morrongiello et al. (1994) tested
this by giving blind and (blindfolded) sighted children different types of 
objects to identify. Some objects were miniature versions of large objects,
like a bicycle, while other objects were oversized versions of small objects, 
such as a big key.

In fact both groups got the same number of objects correct, had problems with 
the same objects and seemed to use the same strategies to identify the objects.
A study on older children did, however, find evidence that by the age of 13 
blind children had developed superior tactile strategies than sighted children
(D'Angiulli, Kennedy & Heller, 1998).

Other senses?

Of course smelling, hearing and feeling are not the only human senses. There is 
also taste along with less-famous but no less vital senses like thermoception
(temperature), equilibrioception (balance) and proprioception (body awareness). 
I haven't been able to find studies on these but I'd be willing to bet
the findings would be the same as for hearing, feeling and smelling.

So strictly speaking the myth is just that, blind people's other senses don't 
compensate for their lack of sight. But, while blind people don't have a more
acute sense of smell, taste or touch, they can use these senses more 
effectively.

Learning echolocation

Using echolocation is one of the most striking demonstrations of the way in 
which people can make more effective use of their sense of hearing. Dan Kish
is the Director of
World Access for the Blind
 and this inspiring short film explains how he uses echolocation to safely ride 
a bicycle on the public roads, just by clicking his tongue. This is absolutely
fantastic!

PS:

I can take the last statement only with a grain of salt, and even if it is so, 
it is an exception and not a general truth.

The above mail confirms my long-held belief about other senses of blind not 
being superior but their effective use by osome.

Rajesh

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