ScienceDaily (June 26, 2008) - Echolocation is a method of perceiving the world 
by emitting noises, then listening to the reflections of these noises off 
objects in the environment. Animals use echolocation for hunting and 
navigation, but visually impaired humans also employ echolocation as part of 
their orienting repertoire while navigating the world. There are a few rare 
individuals who can echolocate very well without assistance.

However, researchers at Boston University have developed a prototype device 
that can enhance auditory cues while navigating an environment. The device 
repeatedly emits an inaudible (to humans) ultrasonic click several times per 
second, and each click reflects off any objects in the environment. The 
reflections are then detected by special head-mounted microphones, and computer 
processing converts the ultrasonic signals into audible signals, which the user 
then can hear over custom open-ear earphones.

The end result is an "auditory image" in which objects in the environment seem 
to emit "sounds" to the user, with objects of different shapes and textures 
emitting subtly different sounds, such that the user can distinguish between 
them. According to BU researcher Cameron Morland, the unique acoustic 
characteristics of the reflections enable the user to better distinguish the 
location and size "surface" properties of objects. For instance, sounds emitted 
by an object to the left will arrive at the left ear a bit sooner and louder 
(interaural time difference and interaural level difference).

Furthermore, sweeping the device over a surface while remaining the same 
distance from it, will produce a reflection with unchanged velocity of the 
surface of an object is flat. If the surface is tilted so it moves closer to 
the user, it will sound higher in pitch; tilted the other way, it will sound 
lower in pitch (a Doppler shift). A roughly textured surface will have some 
regions that are closer, and others that are further away, and users can easily 
learn to recognize those differences, and discern the resulting pattern of 
increased and decreased pitch. "Venetian blinds sound quite different than a 
flat surface, or a bookshelf packed with different-sized books," says Morland.

The BU team has built a prototype capable of simple detection of objects and 
open spaces, and preliminary tests show that most people can echolocate a 
little using the device, and improve quickly with practice. They are now 
refining their prototype to function in more complex, real-world environments. 
Morland believes that given enough practice, people should be able to 
echolocate very well using the device - perhaps better than they could 
unassisted, since higher frequencies outside the normal range of human hearing 
are more useful for echolocation. (Movies of the device can be found at 
http://cns.bu.edu/~cjmorlan/research)

Their paper, "What it is like to be a bat: A sonar system for humans," will be 
presented at 5:20 p.m. on Tuesday, July 1 at Acoustics '08 Paris -- the largest 
meeting ever devoted to acoustical science, to be held Monday June 30 through 
Friday July 4 at the Palais de Congrès in Paris, France.

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