---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jobin Mathew <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 21:11:05 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: Fw: [Mind and Brain] News: Spanish scientists develop
echolocation in humans
To: [email protected]

Hi, felt the list might find this interesting.

Spanish scientists develop echolocation in humansJune 30th, 2009

A team of researchers from the University of Alcalá de Henares (UAH)
has shown scientifically that human beings can develop echolocation, the system
of acoustic signals used by dolphins and bats to explore their surroundings.
Producing certain kinds of tongue clicks helps people to identify
objects around
them without needing to see them, something which would be especially
useful for
the blind.
“In certain circumstances, we humans could rival bats in our echolocation or
biosonar capacity”, Juan Antonio Martínez, lead author of the study and a
researcher at the Superior Polytechnic School of the UAH, tells SINC. The team
led by this scientist has started a series of tests, the first of their kind in
the world, to make use of human beings’ under-exploited echolocation skills.

In the first study, published in the journal Acta Acustica united
with Acustica, the team analyses the physical properties of various sounds,
and proposes the most effective of these for use in echolocation. “The almost
ideal sound is the ‘palate click, a click made by placing the tip of the tongue
on the palate, just behind the teeth, and moving it quickly backwards, although
it is often done downwards, which is wrong”, Martínez explains.

The
researcher says that palate clicks “are very similar to the sounds made by
dolphins, although on a different scale, as these animals have
specially-adapted
organs and can produce 200 clicks per second, while we can only
produce three or
four”. By using echolocation, “which is three-dimensional, and makes
it possible
to ‘see’ through materials that are opaque to visible radiation” it is possible
to measure the distance of an object based on the time that elapses between the
emission of a sound wave and an echo being received of this wave as it is
reflected from the object.

In order to learn how to emit, receive and
interpret sounds, the scientists are developing a method that uses a series of
protocols. This first step is for the individual to know how to make and
identify his or her own sounds (they are different for each person), and later
to know how to use them to distinguish between objects according to their
geometrical properties “as is done by ships’ sonar”.

Some blind people
had previously taught themselves how to use echolocation “by trial and error”.
The best-known cases of these are the Americans Daniel Kish, the only blind
person to have been awarded a certificate to act as a guide for other blind
people, and Ben Underwood, who was considered to be the world’s best
“echolocator” until he died at the start of 2009.

However, no special
physical skills are required in order to develop this skill. “Two hours per day
for a couple of weeks are enough to distinguish whether you have an object in
front of you, and within another two weeks you can tell the difference between
trees and a pavement”, Martínez tells SINC.

The scientist recommends
trying with the typical “sh” sound used to make someone be quiet. Moving a pen
in front of the mouth can be noticed straightaway. This is a similar phenomenon
to that when travelling in a car with the windows down, which makes it possible
to “hear” gaps in the verge of the road.

The next level is to learn how
to master the “palate clicks”. To make sure echoes from the tongue clicks are
properly interpreted, the researchers are working with a laser pointer, which
shows the part of an object at which the sound should be aimed.

A new
way of seeing the world

Martínez has told SINC that his team is now
working to help deaf and blind people to use this method in the future, because
echoes are not only perceived by their ear, but also through vibrations in the
tongue and bones. “For these kinds of people in particular, and for
all of us in
general, this would be a new way of perceiving the world”.

Another of
the team’s research areas involves establishing the biological limits of human
echolocation ability, “and the first results indicate that detailed resolution
using this method could even rival that of sight itself”. In fact, the
researchers started out by being able to tell if there was someone standing in
front of them, but now can detect certain internal structures, such as bones,
and even “certain objects inside a bag”.

The scientists recognise that
they are still at the very early stages, but the possibilities that would be
opened up with the development of echolocation in humans are enormous. This
technique will be very practical not only for the blind, but also for
professionals such as firemen (enabling them to find exit points
through smoke),
and rescue teams, or simply people lost in fog.

A better understanding
of the mental mechanisms used in echolocation could also help to design new
medical imaging technologies or scanners, which make use of the great
penetration capacity of clicks. Martínez stresses that these sounds “are so
penetrating that, even in environments as noisy as the metro, one can sense
discontinuities in the platform or tunnels”.



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