Blind ‘can develop bat-like sonar’
PTI
It’s well-known that bats use a biological version of sonar, called
echolocation, to find their way around at night. That blind humans
could do it too was suspected but not known. Now, Canadian researchers
have proved that they can. File Photo
The HinduIt’s well-known that bats use a biological version of sonar,
called echolocation, to find their way around at night. That blind
humans could do it too was suspected but not known. Now, Canadian
researchers have proved that they can. File Photo

In ray of hope for the blind, a research has found that visually
challenged people can develop “sonar”, that is, learning to navigate
like bats by “seeing” objects from sounds reflected off them.

It’s well-known that bats use a biological version of sonar, called
echolocation, to find their way around at night.

That blind humans could do it too was suspected but not known. Now,
Canadian researchers have proved that they can.

Intriguingly, they did so by using a part of the brain normally
involved in processing visual images. They discovered this by carrying
out brain scans on two male volunteers, aged 43 and 27, who had both
been blind since childhood.

Each was asked to stand outside and try to perceive different objects
such as a car, a flag pole and a tree by making clicking noises and
then picking up their very faint echoes. Tiny microphones were placed
in the volunteers’ ears to record the outgoing and incoming sounds.

The men later had these sounds played back to them, while their brain
activity was monitored using functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) scans. During playback, they were able to identify which object
was which from the echoes.

The fMRI scans showed that these echoes were being processed by brain
regions normally used to process visual information; no echo-related
activity was seen in the auditory brain areas, which would be expected
to process sound, ‘The Daily Telegraph’ reported.

The 43-year-old, who’s lost his sight earlier, performed better. His
eyes were removed at 13 months due to a rare cancer called
retinoblastoma. The same test on sighted people showed no ability to
echolocate, and no echo-related activity in their visual brain
regions.

Dr Mel Goodale from the University of Western Ontario, led the study,
said: “It is clear that echolocation enables blind people to do things
that are otherwise thought to be impossible without vision, and in
this way it can provide blind and vision-impaired people with a high
degree of independence in their daily lives.”

The study has been published in the ‘Public Library of Science One’ journal.
Source: 
http://www.thehindu.com/health/medicine-and-research/article2050660.ece?homepage=true

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