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Sensing Direction and Distance

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Explanation of how people and animals can determine direction and distance through hearing sounds for a study of senses. Also refer to physics, ears, cats, dolphins, bats, sonar, wavelength, frequency, loudness, phase, Ron Kurtus, School for Champions. Copyright © Restrictions

Hearing Direction and Distance

by Ron Kurtus (revised 22 August 2002)

A reason humans and animals have two ears is to allow them to determine the direction of the sound they hear. Processing the time lag and difference in volume provides the perception of direction. Volume and sound quality also help to determine the distance a sound is coming from. Some animals use a sonar effect to determine the distance of their prey. Awareness and practice can enhance your ability to sense direction and distance with sound.

Questions you may have include:

This lesson will answer those questions. There is a mini-quiz near the end of the lesson.

Direction detection

You can readily detect whether a sound is coming from the left or right, you can tell to a degree if the sound is coming from above, and some people can tell if the sound is in front or behind them.

Left or right

Having an ear on each side of your head allows you to distinguish whether a sound is coming from the left or the right. The direction is determined by perception of the difference of arrival time or difference in phase of sounds at each ear. The wavelength of the sound and its tone are also important factors for the brain to determine the direction of the sound source.

Time difference

Sound coming from one direction will reach the ear furthest away approximately 1/500 second later than the closer ear. The brain can discern this time lag.

Volume difference

A difference in volume between the two ears depends on the frequency of the sounds. You can tell the direction of high frequency sounds better than low frequency sounds.

High frequency sounds are blocked by the head and will not easily reach the far ear. This results in a slightly higher volume in the near ear. But if the frequency is low, the wavelength is long enough that the head does not block the sound as readily.

Indications are that it is more difficult to tell direction with low frequencies. This is probably due to the fact that the ear is less sensitive to volume variations with low frequencies and the fact that at low frequencies the wavelength is greater than the distance between the ears. This could also muddle the sound heard.

Reflection

Another factor may be that the ear furthest from the sound gets some sound reflected off objects.

From above, below or in front

You can determine when a sound comes from above, below or in front of the face. This is especially true with high frequency sounds. Height information is provided by a small amount of reflection off the back edge of the ear lobe. This reflection is out of phase for one specific sound frequency, and the elongated shape of the lobe causes the frequency to vary with angle of the source of sound. You can then tell the direction. Height detection does not work well for sounds originating to the side or back, or those lacking high frequency content.

Distance detection

You can detect distance from the sounds you hear, because the loudness is less and the sound is often muffled. It takes experience to be able to judge how far away sounds are coming from.

Some animals such as bats and dolphins use sound to measure distance, as well as direction.

Similar to sonar

Bats and dolphins create very short chirps and are able to estimate the distance of an object, as well as to get other information about the object from the reflected sound they hear. This is very similar to sonar which fishermen use to find fish or that is used by submarines.

Bats get much information from sound

The bat can tell the direction of the object by comparing the sound detected from its two ears. It can tell the distance from the time it takes for the reflected sound to be heard, after being emitted. The bat can also tell if the object is hard or soft—like a tasty moth—by the frequencies that are received, as compared to what was emitted.

Different objects reflect sound frequencies selectively, just like different objects reflect different colors or frequencies of light.

Used underwater

Dolphins and porpoises use sonar the same way as bats—except they use it underwater. It is a shame that humans don’t have this capability, because it might be real handy to have.

Enhancing abilities

By being more aware of where sounds are coming from, you can enhance your ability to tell direction. Likewise, practicing guessing how far away a sound is and then verifying your guess, you can improve your ability to approximate  distance through listening to the sounds.

Summary

You detect direction by comparing the sound coming into each ear. By listening carefully, you can sometimes determine the distance a sound comes from. Bats and dolphins can find objects through making noises and listening to the reflection.

Answers to Readers' Questions


Be careful, thoughtful and listen


Resources

Following are some resources on this subject.

Websites

The Direction of Sound - Explanation from Hear-It, a site dedicated to preventing hearing loss

Hearing and Perception - From USCS Electronic Music Studios

Books

Top-rated books on Hearing


Mini-quiz to check your understanding

1. How do cats hear behind them?

They can only hear to the front

They turn around

They cock their ears backwards

2. How can you tell a sound is from far away?

It is muffled and not very loud

You can barely hear its echo

It goes in one ear and out the other

3. How do bats detect objects to eat?

By processing reflected sounds

By their strong sense of smell

By hearing moths chirp to each other

If you got all three correct, you are on your way to becoming a Champion in Understanding your Senses. If you had problems, you had better look over the material again.


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