Breaking
November 28, 2024

Humans Can Learn Echolocation Too Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com

Most of us associate echolocation with bats. These amazing creatures are able to chirp at frequencies beyond the limit of our hearing, and they use the reflected sound to map the world around them. It’s the perfect technology for navigating pitch-dark cave systems, so it’s understandable why evolution drove down this innovative path.

Humans, on the other hand, have far more limited hearing, and we’re not great chirpers, either. And yet, it turns out we can learn this remarkable skill, too. In fact, research suggests it’s far more achievable than you might think—for the sighted and vision impaired alike!

Bounce That Sound

Bats are the most famous biologcal users of echolocation. Credit: Petteri Aimonen

Before we talk about humans using echolocation, let’s examine how the pros do it. Bats are nature’s acoustic engineers, emitting rapid-fire ultrasonic pulses from their larynx that can range from 11 kHz to over 200 kHz. Much of that range is far beyond human hearing, which tops out at under 20 kHz. As these sound waves bounce off objects in their environment, the bat’s specialized ultrasonic-capable ears capture the returning echoes. Their brain then processes these echoes in real-time, comparing the outgoing and incoming signals to construct a detailed 3D map of their surroundings. The differences in echo timing tell them how far away objects are, while variations in frequency and amplitude reveal information about size, texture, and even movement. Bats will vary between constant-frequency chirps and frequency-modulated tones depending on where they’re flying and what they’re trying to achieve, such as navigating a dark cavern or chasing prey.  This biological sonar is so precise that bats can use it to track tiny insects while flying at speed.

Humans can’t naturally produce sounds in the ultrasonic frequency range. Nor could we hear them if we did. That doesn’t mean we can’t echolocate, though—it just means we don’t have quite the same level of equipment as the average bat. Instead, humans can achieve relatively basic echolocation using simple tongue clicks. In fact, a research paper from 2021 outlined that skills in this area can be developed with as little as a 10-week training program. Over this period, researchers successfully taught echolocation to both sighted and blind participants using a combination of practical exercises and virtual training. A group of 14 sighted and 12 blind participants took part, with the former using blindfolds to negate their vision.

The aim of the research was to investigate click-based echolocation in humans. When a person makes a sharp click with their tongue, they’re essentially launching a sonic probe into their environment. As these sound waves radiate outward, they reflect off surfaces and return to the ears with subtle changes. A flat wall creates a different echo signature than a rounded pole, while soft materials absorb more sound than hard surfaces. The timing between click and echo precisely encodes distance, while differences between the echoes reaching each ear allows for direction finding.

The orientation task involved asking participants to use mouth clicks to determine the way a rectangular object was oriented in front of them. Credit: research paper
The size discrimination task asked participants to determine which disc was bigger solely using echolocation. Credit: research paper 

The training regime consisted of a variety of simple tasks. The researchers aimed to train participants on size discrimination, with participants facing two foam board disks mounted on metal poles. They had to effectively determine which foam disc was larger using only their mouth clicks and their hearing. The program also included an orientation challenge, which used a single rectangular board that could be rotated to different angles. The participants had to again use clicks and their hearing to determine the orientation of the board. These basic tools allowed participants to develop increasingly refined echo-sensing abilities in a controlled environment.

Perhaps the most intriguing part of the training involved a navigation task in a virtually simulated maze. Researchers first created special binaural recordings of a mannikin moving through a real-world maze, making clicks as it went. They then created virtual mazes that participants could navigate using keyboard controls. As they navigated through the virtual maze, without vision, the participants would hear the relevant echo signature recorded in the real maze. The idea was to allow participants to build mental maps of virtual spaces using only acoustic information. This provided a safe, controlled environment for developing advanced navigation skills before applying them in the real world. Participants also attempted using echolocation to navigate in the real world, navigating freely with experimenters on hand to guide them if needed.

Participants were trained to navigate a virtual maze using audio cues only. Credit: research paper

The most surprising finding wasn’t that people could learn echolocation – it was how accessible the skill proved to be. Previous assumptions about age and visual status being major factors in learning echolocation turned out to be largely unfounded. While younger participants showed some advantages in the computer-based exercises, the core skill of practical echolocation was  accessible to all participants. After 10 weeks of training, participants were able to correctly answer the size discrimination task over 75% of the time, and at increased range compared to when they began. Orientation discrimination also improved greatly over the test period to a success rate over 60% for the cohort. Virtual maze completion times also dropped by over 50%.

Over time, participants improved in all tasks—particularly the size discrimination task, as seen in the results on this graph. The difficulty level of tasks were also scaled over time, presenting greater challenge as participants improved their echolocation skills. Credit: research paper

The study also involved a follow-up three months later with the blind members of the cohort. Participants credited the training with improving their spatial awareness, and some noted they had begun to use the technique to find doors or exits, or to make their way through strange places.

What’s particularly fascinating is how this challenges our understanding of basic human sensory capabilities. Echolocation doesn’t involve adding new sensors or augmenting existing ones—it’s just about training the brain to extract more information from signals it already receives. It’s a reminder that human perception is far more plastic than we often assume.

The researchers suggest that echolocation training should be integrated into standard mobility training for visually impaired individuals. Given the relatively short training period needed to develop functional echo-sensing abilities, it’s hard to argue against its inclusion. We might be standing at the threshold of a broader acceptance of human echolocation, not as an exotic capability, but as a practical skill that anyone can learn.

 

This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

All rights reserved to : USAGOLDMIES . www.usagoldmines.com

You can Enjoy surfing our website categories and read more content in many fields you may like .

Why USAGoldMines ?

USAGoldMines is a comprehensive website offering the latest in financial, crypto, and technical news. With specialized sections for each category, it provides readers with up-to-date market insights, investment trends, and technological advancements, making it a valuable resource for investors and enthusiasts in the fast-paced financial world.

Recent:

Even Apple Get Their Parts Wrong Sometimes Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
A Look Under the Hood of Intermediate Frequency Transformers Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
DIY Pipe Inspector Goes Where No Bot Has Gone Before Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Would an Indexing Feature Benefit Your Next Hinge Design? Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
FLOSS Weekly Episode 811: Elixir & Nerves – Real Embedded Linux Jonathan Bennett | usagoldmines....
Could Nuclear Be The Way To Produce Synthetic Fuel On The Cheap? Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Retrotechtacular: The Deadly Shipmate Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Boss Byproducts: Corium Is Man-Made Lava Kristina Panos | usagoldmines.com
Life Found On Ryugu Asteroid Sample, But It Looks Very Familiar Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
Getting Started In Laser Cutting Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
Massive Mural from Thermal Receipt Paper Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Your Undocumented Project May Also Baffle People Someday Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
A Robot Meant for Humans Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com
A Laser with Mirrors makes a CRT-like Display Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com
Alternatives Don’t Need to be Bashed Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com
Linux Fu: Audio Network Pipes Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Recreating Unobtainium Weather Station Sensors Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
The Junk Machine Prints Corrupted Advertising On Demand Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
Electric Motors Run Continuously at Near-Peak Power Bryan Cockfield | usagoldmines.com
Building A Pi-Powered LED Chess Board Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Solar Orbiter Takes Amazing Solar Pictures Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Bank Executive Drains $60,181 From Dead Customer’s Account, Tells Colleagues He’s in Touch With Clie...
An Over-Engineered Basement Monitor Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
E-Ink Screen Combined With Analog Dial Is Epic Win Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Square Roots 1800s Style — No, the Other 1800s Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Keebin’ with Kristina: the One with the TRON Keyboard Kristina Panos | usagoldmines.com
Experimental Drone Flies Like A Bird Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Apollo-era PCB Reverse Engineering to KiCad Chris Lott | usagoldmines.com
The Lancaster ASCII Keyboard Recreated Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Hacking Global Positioning Systems Onto 16th-Century Maps Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Programmable Zener is Really an IC Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Aftershock II: How Students Shattered 20-Year Amateur Rocket Records Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Hackaday Links: November 24, 2024 Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Double Your Analog Oscilloscope Fun with this Retro Beam Splitter Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Flyback, Done Right Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
RISC CPU Lives in Excel Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Modular Multi-Rotor Flies Up To Two Hours Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Hacking the Soil to Combat Desertification Navarre Bartz | usagoldmines.com
$40 Ham Antenna Works Six Bands Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
RFID From First Principles and Saving a Cat Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Forget Pixel Art: Try Subpixels Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Police Issue Warning Against ‘Grandparent Scam’ After Elderly Man Loses $9,500 To Thief Posing As Hi...
Close Shave for an Old Oscilloscope Saved with a Sticky Note Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
8,100 Banks and Financial Institutions Brace for Fallout As Hackers Reveal Major Data Breach on Dark...
3D Printed Boat Uses Tank Tracks For Amphibious Propulsion Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Open Source, Forced Innovation, and Making Good Products Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com
3D Space Can Be Tiled With Corner-free Shapes Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
Drilling Rig Makes Accurate Holes In Seconds Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Transforming Drone Drives and Flies Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Mammalian Ancestors Shed Light on The Great Dying Navarre Bartz | usagoldmines.com
Bankrupt Crypto Exchange FTX Set To Begin Paying Creditors and Customers in Early 2025, Says CEO Rho...
Lasers, Galvos, Action: A Quest for Laser Mastery Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Build Yourself A Useful Resistor Decade Box Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
OLED Screen Mounting, Without The Pain Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
Hack On Self: The Un-Crash Alarm Arya Voronova | usagoldmines.com
Enhiker Helps You Decide if its a Good Day to Hike Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
This Week in Security: Footguns, Bing Worms, and Gogs Jonathan Bennett | usagoldmines.com
A Surprisingly Simple Omnidirectional Display Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Learn About Robot Arms By Building Pedro 2.0 Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Quick and Very Dirty Repair Gets Smoked PLC Back in the Game Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Creating and Control of Magnetic Skyrmions in Ferromagnetic Film Demonstrated Maya Posch | usagoldmi...
Gear Up: A 15-Minute Intro on Involute Gears Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Custom Mouse Rocks Neat Thumbstick Design Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
FREE-WILi Turns DC32 Badge Into Hardware Dev Tool Tom Nardi | usagoldmines.com
USB-C For Hackers: Reusing Cables Arya Voronova | usagoldmines.com
There’s Now a Wiki For Hacking Redbox Machines Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Blended Wing Body Passenger Airplanes and the End of Winged Tubes Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com
Measuring the Mighty Roar of SpaceX’s Starship Rocket Tom Nardi | usagoldmines.com
Simple Hydrogen Generator Makes Bubbles and Looks Cool Lewin Day | usagoldmines.com
Simple Stack of Ferrites Shows How Fluxgate Magnetometers Work Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Stepping On LEGO For Science Kristina Panos | usagoldmines.com
A Tube Stereo Amplifier, From Scratch Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
A Cyberpunk Pocketwatch Navarre Bartz | usagoldmines.com
If Life Gives You Lemons, Build this Lemontron Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
FLOSS Weekly Episode 810: Pi4J – Stable and Boring on the Raspberry Pi Jonathan Bennett | usagoldmin...
With Core ONE, Prusa’s Open Source Hardware Dream Quietly Dies Tom Nardi | usagoldmines.com
FreeCAD Version 1.0 Released Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com
Boss Byproducts: Calthemites Are Man-Made Cave Dwellers Kristina Panos | usagoldmines.com
An Animated Walkthrough of How Large Language Models Work Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
Junk Box Build Helps Hams with SDR Dan Maloney | usagoldmines.com
Most Extreme Hypergravity Facility Starts Up in China With 1,900 Times Earth’s Gravity Maya Posch | ...
Alleged Corrupt Los Angeles Police Officers Implicated in Crypto ‘Godfather’ Extortion Scheme Daily ...
Batteries Not Included: Navigating the Implants of Tomorrow Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
Dial-up Internet Using the Viking DLE-200B Telephone Line Simulator Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com
Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 Seen in the Wild Elliot Williams | usagoldmines.com
Supercon 2024 SAO Petal KiCad Redrawing Project Chris Lott | usagoldmines.com
The Vecdec Cyberdeck is More than a Pretty Case Tom Nardi | usagoldmines.com
Supercon 2024 SAO Petal KiCad Redrawing Project Chris Lott | usagoldmines.com
The Great Redbox Cleanup: One Company is Hauling Away America’s Last DVD Kiosks Lewin Day | usagoldm...
Power Supply With Benchtop Features Fits In Your Pocket Donald Papp | usagoldmines.com
The Barcode Beast Likes Your CDs Jenny List | usagoldmines.com
Tearing Down A SLA Printer With The Engineers Who Built It Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Hacking Haptics: The 19-Sensor Patch Bringing Touch to Life Heidi Ulrich | usagoldmines.com
A Very Fast Camera Slider For The Glam Shot Danie Conradie | usagoldmines.com
Crowdsourcing Ionosphere Data with Phones Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Gloriously Impractical: Overclocking the Raspberry Pi 5 to 3.6 GHz Maya Posch | usagoldmines.com
Do You Dream in Color? Al Williams | usagoldmines.com
Exploring the Gakken FX Micro-Computer Alexander Rowsell | usagoldmines.com
Keebin’ with Kristina: the One With the Typo Kristina Panos | usagoldmines.com
The Laser Shadow Knows Al Williams | usagoldmines.com

Leave a Reply