New technique lets blind people locate objects like bats

London: Blind and visually impaired people have the potential to use echolocation - a technique similar to that used by bats and dolphins - to determine the location of an object, according to new research.

Researchers from the University of Southampton examined how hearing, and particularly the hearing of echoes, could help blind people with spatial awareness and navigation.

The study also examined the possible effects of hearing impairment and how to optimise echolocation ability in order to help improve the independence and quality of life of people with visual impairments.

Researchers conducted a series of experiments with sighted and blind human listeners, using a `virtual auditory space` technique, to investigate the effects of the distance and orientation of a reflective object on ability to identify the right-versus-left position of the object.

They used sounds with different bandwidths and durations (from 10-400 milliseconds) as well as various audio manipulations to investigate which aspects of the sounds were important.

"We wanted to determine unambiguously whether blind people, and perhaps even sighted people, can use echoes from an object to determine roughly where the object is located.

"We also wanted to figure out what factors facilitate and restrict people`s abilities to use echoes for this purpose in order to know how to enhance ability in the real world," Dr Daniel Rowan, lead author of the study, said.

The results showed that both sighted and blind people with good hearing, even if completely inexperienced with echolocation, showed the potential to use echoes to tell where objects are.

Researchers also found that hearing high-frequency sounds (above 2 kHz) is required for good performance, and so common forms of hearing impairment will probably cause major problems.

"Some people are better at this than others, and being blind doesn`t automatically confer good echolocation ability, though we don`t yet know why. Nevertheless, ability probably gets even better with extensive experience and feedback.

"We also found that our ability to use echoes to locate an object gets rapidly worse with increasing distance from the object, especially when the object is not directly facing us. While our experiments purposely removed any influence of head movement, doing so might help extend ability to farther distances," Rowan added.

The knowledge gained from this study will help researchers to develop training programmes and assistive devices for blind people and sighted people in low-vision situations.

The study was published in the journal Hearing Research.

PTI

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