测量人类在水下环境中增强的声音定位能力

T. Koay, S. K. Yeo, G. Tan, S. Tan, P. Seekings, M. Chitre
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引用次数: 1

摘要

由于阻抗失配的减少和水中声速的提高导致耳间时间差异(ITD)和耳间强度差异(IID)显著减少,人类在水下定位声音的能力很差,如果不是没有能力的话。水下声音定位的改进将显著提高潜水员的安全,以及潜水员感知和欣赏水下环境的方式。为此,开发了一种增强水下人类声音定位能力的系统。该系统从接收信号的高频声学成分中提取方向线索,并将音频波段的线索重新引入佩戴该系统的潜水员。这种方法的新颖之处在于,它不需要任何关于信号的明确信息来预先定位它们。除了重新引入方向信号外,系统几乎将整个信号带以最小的相对失真传递给用户。然后由用户来感知、检测和定位声音。在本文中,我们介绍了使用该系统测量潜水员定位性能的实验设置和结果。实验装置包括一个随机放置在一个连续的、半径为一米的半圆形框架中的源发射器,以及一个被蒙住眼睛试图定位声源的受试者。发射机和目标的航向都被数字记录下来,并进行比较,以衡量定位性能。在不同的信噪比和20kHz以上的不同频率下进行了实验。实验结果表明,使用该系统的潜水员能够在近75%的时间内将源定位在±15度范围内。我们还观察到,在我们所测试的信噪比范围内,信噪比对定位性能没有显著影响。受试者能够在嘈杂的码头环境中使用该系统定位声源。在几组实验中,当受试者获得使用该系统的经验时,受试者的定位性能似乎得到了改善。这表明,人类的大脑适应了它的感知能力,并很快学会了使用新的方向线索。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Measuring the augmented sound localization ability of humans in the underwater environment
Humans are poor, if not incapable, at localizing sound underwater due to significant reduction in Inter-aural Temporal Differences (ITD) and Inter-aural Intensity Differences (IID) caused by reduced impedance mismatch and the higher sound speed in water. An improvement in sound localization underwater will significantly enhance divers safety, the way divers perceive and appreciate the underwater environments. A system that augments and enhances the sound localization ability of humans underwater was built for this purpose. The system extracts directional cues from high frequency acoustic component of the received signal and reintroduce the cues in audio band to the diver that wears the system. The novelty of this approach is that it does not need any explicit information on the signals in advance to localize them. The system passes almost the entire signal band to its user with minimum relative distortion except the directional cue ti re-introduced. It is then up to the user to perceive, detect, and localize the sound. In this paper, we present the setup and results from an experiment that measures the localization performance of divers using the system. The experiment setup consists of a source transmitter that was randomly positioned in a contiguous, one-meter radius, semi-circular frame, and a blindfolded subject that attempts to localize the acoustic source. Both the headings of the transmitter and subject were digitally recorded and compared to gauge the localization performance. Experiments have been carried out across different signal to noise ratio and across different frequencies above 20kHz. The result from the experiment shows that a diver using the system was able to localize a source to within ±15 degrees nearly 75% of the time. It is also observed that SNR does not significantly affect the localization performance within the range of SNR that we were testing. The subjects were able to localize acoustic source in a noisy marina environment with the system. The localization performance of the subjects seemed to improve as the subjects gained experience using the system over a few experiment sets. This suggests that the human brain adapts its perception ability and learns to use the new directional cues rather quickly.
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