Wallmeier Ludwig, Wiegrebe Lutz
Graduate School of Systemic Neuroscience, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany; Division of Neurobiology, Department Biologie II, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 31;9(12):e115363. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115363. eCollection 2014.
Many blind people rely on echoes from self-produced sounds to assess their environment. It has been shown that human subjects can use echolocation for directional localization and orientation in a room, but echo-acoustic distance perception--e.g. to determine one's position in a room--has received little scientific attention, and systematic studies on the influence of additional early reflections and exploratory head movements are lacking. This study investigates echo-acoustic distance discrimination in virtual echo-acoustic space, using the impulse responses of a real corridor. Six blindfolded sighted subjects and a blind echolocation expert had to discriminate between two positions in the virtual corridor, which differed by their distance to the front wall, but not to the lateral walls. To solve this task, participants evaluated echoes that were generated in real time from self-produced vocalizations. Across experimental conditions, we systematically varied the restrictions for head rotations, the subjects' orientation in virtual space and the reference position. Three key results were observed. First, all participants successfully solved the task with discrimination thresholds below 1 m for all reference distances (0.75-4 m). Performance was best for the smallest reference distance of 0.75 m, with thresholds around 20 cm. Second, distance discrimination performance was relatively robust against additional early reflections, compared to other echolocation tasks like directional localization. Third, free head rotations during echolocation can improve distance discrimination performance in complex environmental settings. However, head movements do not necessarily provide a benefit over static echolocation from an optimal single orientation. These results show that accurate distance discrimination through echolocation is possible over a wide range of reference distances and environmental conditions. This is an important functional benefit of human echolocation, which may also play a major role in the calibration of auditory space representations.
许多盲人依靠自身发出声音的回声来评估周围环境。研究表明,人类受试者可以利用回声定位在房间中进行方向定位和定向,但回声声学距离感知——例如确定自己在房间中的位置——很少受到科学关注,并且缺乏关于额外早期反射和探索性头部运动影响的系统研究。本研究利用一条真实走廊的脉冲响应,在虚拟回声声学空间中研究回声声学距离辨别。六名蒙眼的视力正常受试者和一名盲人回声定位专家必须辨别虚拟走廊中的两个位置,这两个位置到前墙的距离不同,但到侧壁的距离相同。为了解决这个任务,参与者评估了由自身发声实时产生的回声。在不同的实验条件下,我们系统地改变了头部旋转的限制、受试者在虚拟空间中的方向以及参考位置。观察到三个关键结果。首先,所有参与者都成功完成了任务,在所有参考距离(0.75 - 4米)下辨别阈值均低于1米。对于0.75米的最小参考距离,表现最佳,阈值约为20厘米。其次,与方向定位等其他回声定位任务相比,距离辨别性能对额外早期反射相对稳健。第三,在复杂环境中,回声定位过程中的自由头部旋转可以提高距离辨别性能。然而,从最佳单一方向进行静态回声定位时,头部运动不一定会带来优势。这些结果表明,通过回声定位在广泛的参考距离和环境条件下进行精确的距离辨别是可能的。这是人类回声定位的一项重要功能优势,也可能在听觉空间表征的校准中发挥重要作用。