Abstract

This paper presents an advanced bio-inspired binaural sonar sensor capable of localizing reflectors in 3D space with a single reading. The technique makes use of broadband spectral cues in the received echoes only. Two artificial pinnae act as complex direction-dependent spectral filters on the echoes returning from the ensonified reflector. The “active head-related transfer function” (AHRTF) is introduced to describe this spectral filtering as a function of the reflector angle, taking into account the transmitter radiation pattern, both pinnae and the particular sonar head geometry. 3D localization is performed by selecting the azimuth—elevation pair with the highest a posteriori probability, given the binaural target echo spectrum. Experimental 3D localization results of a ball reflector show that the AHRTF carries sufficient information to discriminate between different reflector locations under realistic noise conditions. In addition, experiments with more complex reflectors illustrate that the AHRTF dominates the echo spectrum, allowing 3D localization in the presence of spectrum distortions caused by unknown reflector filtering. These experiments show that a fairly simple sonar device can extract more spatial information about realistic objects in its direct surroundings than is conventionally believed.

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