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Device Lets You See With Your Ears
The technology could be used to augment infrared and sonar to see at
night or even underwater.
  By Eric Niiler
  Wed Aug 3, 2011 07:45 AM ET


THE GIST
  a.. A new device converts visual signals to auditory ones.
  b.. Added to eyeglasses, the technology could help the visually
impaired better navigate their surroundings.

enlarge
Sunglasses with a tiny webcam in the bridge of the nose to provide
visual input to the system, which is then converted into different
sounds. Click to enlarge this image.
Courtesy Michael Proulx


A new device that links spy glasses, a webcam and a smart phone could
make it easier for blind people to "see" shapes by converting visual
signals to auditory ones and sending them to another part of the
brain.

Its developers also hope that the same device could be used to give a
new twist to infrared vision for seeing at night or take sonar to a
different level for navigating underwater.

Michael Proulx, a neuroscientist at Queen Mary's College in London,
will be demonstrating the device, know as "vOICe," at the American
Psychological Association meeting this week in Washington.

vOICe works by mapping visual images to sound and then providing
blindfolded users with a sense of what an object is and where it is
located.

"The most user- friendly way is to have a pair of spy glasses or
sunglasses with a tiny webcam in the bridge of the nose to provide
visual input," Proulx told Discovery News. "Then I use a small pocket
PC, which runs the software which takes input and provides auditory
input through headphones."

Differences in sound, including pitch and loudness provide clues to
the map. For example, for vertical location, "up" is represented by
high frequencies and "down" by low frequencies. Timed-stereo panning,
which is much like panning with a video camera, keeps an object within
a picture while giving a panoramic view. Horizontal location is
indicated by the time it takes for a left-to-right scan of each image.
Bright white is heard at maximum volume and dark is silent.

"The program takes visual input from the camera, then scans the image
from left to right," Proulx said. "Then you hear this soundscape where
the changes in frequency and volume correspond to pixels in the
image."

The basic software and hardware to convert visual signals to audio
ones has been around for more than 15 years, but advances in computer
technology and communications now make it easier for people to
actually use a more portable version in their daily lives. That's
according Dutch software engineer Peter Meijer, original developer of
the vOICe.

One of the biggest challenges is that it takes people three months of
training to use it. He also says that he's had trouble getting a big
enough demand to make it commercially viable, so he gives away the
device software for free and developed an Android mobile application.

Meijer is also hopeful that new kinds of "augmented reality" glasses
may be adapted to use his imaging and sound set-up. While these bulky
goggles may be find for gamers, many blind people want to look a bit
more normal, so more work is also needed in that area.

"The main thing is to work out how to make the brain and the
technology meet in the middle," Meijer said. "The technology is
mature, but we don't know how the brain deals with complex sounds."

Meijer said neuroscientists like Proulx and others are learning that
parts of the brain may be more plastic than we originally thought, and
that areas where we process visual images (up to 30 percent of our
brain) may receive other sound and touch signals as well.

The two had a small NSF grant to develop a portable device that will
be demonstrated this week.

"You could use this to bring in ultraviolet or infrared as well,"
Meijer said. "If you want to see like a snake sees or if police are
looking for someone in a forest, they could use a device like this to
augment their vision with infrared information."

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