Space Perception by Acoustic Cues Influences
Auditory-induced Body Balance Control
Shinichi Yamagiwa
1
and Naka Gotoda
2
and Yuji Yamamoto
3
1
Faculty of Engineering, Information and System, University of Tsukuba/ JST PRESTO, Tsukuba , Japan
2
Department of Sports Science, Japan Institute of Sports Sciences, Tokyo, Japan
3
Research Center of Health, Physical Fitness and Sports, Department of Psychology and Human Developmental Sciences,
Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan
Keywords:
Acoustic, Visibility, Blind, Vection, Body balance.
Abstract:
The auditory-induced illusion called vection has been investigated for decades. However, it is not confirmed
how the illusion affects to body balance. Especially, during a dynamic activity such as walking, it has not
confirmed whether any clear effect to the body balance control appears or not. This paper focuses on inves-
tigating the effect of vection during walking. Especially this paper will discuss the space perception induced
by acoustic stimuli that indicate the directions. The authors of this paper measured the response time from the
acoustic cue to body balance control and the rotation amount using a small sensor system with accelerometer,
magnetic and gyro sensors. According to the experiments with sight/blind participants from young to old ages,
requesting them to walk to the directions of the acoustic cues with/without sight, the authors confirmed a close
relation between the vision and the auditory of human during a dynamic activity.
1 INTRODUCTION
We are surrounded by sounds in our life such as the
winds in a green field, whisper in a silent room, noise
in a hard traffic between high buildings, chat of peo-
ples in a restaurant and so on. A sudden large sound
lets your head turn up and see its direction. In a fog,
you would try to know the circumstance around you
hearing sounds and then you try to know if any danger
is coming to your side or not. These human natural
behaviors are coming from potential ability of space
perception (Blake and Sekuler, 2005) with auditory
and visual information acquired from the environ-
ment. However, the certainness of the space percep-
tion from the auditory information includes many un-
known cognitive responses, especially the influence
of the auditory related to the body balance control
during active movements like walking.
Several advanced research results have been re-
ported to show that how cognitive behavior would
happen when the body balance is influenced by au-
ditory cues given to human. There exists a cognitive
illusion called vection (Valjamae, 2009) that causes
a misunderstanding of changing posture by the au-
ditory cues which is experienced in an environment
with multiple speakers surrounded in a human (Lack-
ner, 1978). However, it is not known how auditory
cues influence the space perception during dynamic
body balance control. For example, how correct does
a human follow auditory cues with walking? How
fast is the response from the cues to the body balance
controls? And how the vision influences to the body
balance when the different types of auditory cues are
given?
This paper focuses on these unknown human na-
ture responses regarding the dynamic body balance
control using auditory cues that changes the sound
pan directions among left, center and right. To in-
vestigate the influences by the auditory cues given to
human, we categorized two types of cognitive behav-
iors. The first one is the interference to the body bal-
ance control potentially affected by the cues. Another
is the interference to the human body balance control
guided by the cues when he/she chases the cues. We
focus on the latter one by performing experiences at
walking situation giving acoustic cues that the sound
pan is changing suddenly or smoothly among right,
center and left randomly. In the experiments, we ap-
plied the auditory cue patterns to congenital and ac-
quired blindness and healthy sighted (with/without
eye mask) participants to compare the cognitive be-
haviors from the acoustic cues to the body balance
30
Yamagiwa S., Gotoda N. and Yamamoto Y..
Space Perception by Acoustic Cues Influences Auditory-induced Body Balance Control.
DOI: 10.5220/0004601200300040
In Proceedings of the International Congress on Sports Science Research and Technology Support (icSPORTS-2013), pages 30-40
ISBN: 978-989-8565-79-2
Copyright
c
2013 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
control during walking situation.
According to the experiments, three main findings
are resulted in this paper: 1) space perception between
blindness and sighted people differs. Especially, con-
genital blindness people have a keen space perception
from the auditory cues used as the guide for the walk-
ing direction. 2) Patterns of sound pan as the acoustic
cues induce different body balance control behaviors
in the aspects of response speed and rotation amount
of body. The sudden change of the sound pan in-
duced fast and large balance control. Finally 3) vision
of sighted or acquired blindness people is combined
to control their body balance. They had performed
faster to response against the acoustic cues without
eye mask than invalidating the vision with eye mask.
In the next section, we introduce the advanced re-
search results related to our experiments. Section 3
will explain the methods of our experiments and pro-
pose hypotheses expected from the experiments. Sec-
tion 4 will explain the results of the experiments and
will show proofs for our hypothesizes. Finally we will
discuss the experimental results, the findings and will
conclude this paper.
2 RELATED WORKS
The relationship between acoustic cue and body bal-
ance control has been investigated since 1970s.
The early investigations were related to the
auditory-induced illusion (Lackner, 1977)(Lackner,
1978)(Lackner, 1983). It is well known experiments
using rotating sound source with 10-20Hz sound pan
change of each speaker. Sitting in the environment,
the participant can percept that either ”I am moving”
or ”Surround is moving”. Extending the illusory
phenomenon, researchers investigate the posture
perception with multiple rotating sound sources.
Following the rotating direction of the sound, the
participant percepts illusory posture movement
(actually posture does not change).
On the other hand, the clinical approach reports
an experiment that gives electrical stimuli to vestibu-
lar organ of the human participants. It results that the
stimuli absolutely affects to his/her body balance con-
trol (Aoki et al., 2000). It is now very hard to perform
the experiment with the vestibular stimuli due to the
ethical problems. Therefore, clinically the participant
is a patient who is in hospital to aid auditory-related
diseases.
When we consider applications of the vection or
the vestibular stimuli, the biofeedback application is
one of the interesting directions for attractive utiliza-
tions. The biofeedback is a trend word used in the
application area of the auditory-induced body bal-
ance control. For example, (Dozza et al., 2006), (Gi-
ansanti et al., 2009) and (Brunelli et al., 2006) have
reported the body balance control using a feedback
system to keep a vertical standing posture. We think
these research projects are going to the frontline of
the research regarding auditory cues with sound pan
changes that affect the right and the left bias of pos-
ture. The research is focused on the static posture
control with the healthy sighted, the blindness, and
some Parkinson’s disease participants. However, we
are going to focus on the body balance control against
auditory cues of the blindness and the sighted people
under a walking situation. Under such an active en-
vironment, the mechanisms of the auditory-induced
body balance control has not been clearly explained in
the previous researches because the experiments had
been focused on illusions occurred at a static posture.
Regarding the Parkinsons patients, a biofeedback
system called Walkmate has been developed by the
researches (Miyake, 2009) (Hove et al., 2012). The
Walkmate generates rhythmic pacing sequences to the
Parkinson patients using nonlinear limit cycle oscil-
lators. The rhythmic pacing timings are generated
by feedforwarded the timings taken from a pressure
sensor put in the patient’s foot. The system induces
self-walking from the potential characteristics of the
disease. Therefore, this type of application using au-
ditory cues during active body balance control can be
treated as one of special cases. Therefore, we want to
try to find how the auditory and the body balance con-
trol of physically healthy persons are involved during
active movements like walking.
As we discussed above, it is not well-known that
the cognitive response from vection to the body bal-
ance regardingphysically healthy people. The vection
is recognized as an internal psychological and cogni-
tive perception. Therefore, the body balance might be
influenced by the vection in a dynamic body balance
control such as during walking, running or hard sports
activity. However, the research regarding the vection
is still under progress in the static body balance con-
trol or self-cognitive issue due to the complex rela-
tion to the sight. Thus, although the space perception
of human in a dynamic body balance control would
be related to the vection and the vision, it is not ex-
plored that the dynamic body balance control relates
to the auditory stimuli. Finally the new findings will
be utilized in sports trainings, new society design to
eliminate dangerousness induced by acoustic illusion,
and engineering applications such as a novel rehabili-
tation system using a sound guide.
In this paper, we focus on exploring influences
to the space perception regarding the dynamic body
SpacePerceptionbyAcousticCuesInfluencesAuditory-inducedBodyBalanceControl
31
t
e
tS
+
=
1
1
)(
Sigmoid function
changing in a second
Blue wave represents
the right sound pan.
Red wave represents
the left sound pan.
Sigmoid
Center Heviside Heviside
Sigmoid
(a) (a)
(c) (b) (b)
Figure 1: Sound pan change waves when the Heviside and
the Sigmoid function are applied. The blue part is a sound
pan from right side. The red part is the one from left side.
(a) shows the pan change with the Sigmoid function. (b)
is the one with the Heviside. The center pan is shown in
(c). The sound volume was adjusted to be felt in the same
among (a), (b) and (c). Therefore, the range of sampling
data during the center pan is half of the right or left sound
pan.
balance control induced by the auditory cues. We
have questions for the perception: 1) If human can
follow auditory cues and walk the expected direction
with/without vision or not. 2) If the sight is not related
to the space perception when we follow the acoustic
cues or not. And 3) if we have any difference in the
response time from the acoustic cues to the dynamic
body balance with/without the sight or the sound type
of the cues or not. Thus, we report the experiments
to explore answers of the questions above and discuss
the semantics of the results.
3 METHODS AND HYPOTHESIS
3.1 Methods and Experimental Setup
To investigate the space perception regarding the dy-
namic body balance control induced by the auditory
cues, we use a quite simple method following the
steps; 1) a walking participant hears auditory cues
that change the sound pans among right, center and
left, 2) the participant chases the sound pan direction,
3) congenital, acquired blindness and sighted people
with/without an eye mask perform the same steps of
1) and 2). According to the steps, we observe the re-
sponse time from the beginning of the cues, the rota-
tion amount of body and the walking direction.
We prepared the experimental environment for the
methods above in gymnasiums. Let us explain the
Table 1: Participants attended in the experiment.
Participant Visibility Sex Age
A Congenital blindness Male 27
B Aquired blindness Male 41
C Aquired blindness Female 38
D Sighted Female 37
E Sighted Female 27
F Sighted Female 24
G Sighted Female 20
H Sighted Male 58
I Sighted Female 40
J Sighted Male 62
Y axis
Z axis
X axis
Piggybacking the
sensor system
held in a jogging
holster
Figure 2: Magnetic sensor axis of the integrated sensor sys-
tem piggybacked by participants during the experiment.
materials, the places and the participant selection con-
cept listed below:
Place for Experiment: We have prepared empty
and silent gymnasiums in Kochi University of
Technology and in the Blind School in Kochi Pre-
fecture in Japan where the walking length by the
participant almost equals to the one of the goal-
to-goal in a basketball court. The air temperature
in the gymnasiums was about 10 20
C without
any wind during autumn season. The floor made
of wood keeps flat without inclination.
Auditory Cues used in the Experiment: The sound
pattern including the auditory cues consists of
three types of tones. The first one is the starting
trigger for the participants that indicate the start-
ing point of the experiment. It is constructed by
880Hz sin wave with 16 bit sound resolution. This
trigger sound is outputted in the center pan. The
subsequent sound stimuli organize a right-to-left
or a left-to-right pan change constructedby 440Hz
sin wave with 16 bit sound resolution as illus-
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The starting cues
Gyro sensor also can
acquire hand up and down.
Acoustic sequence
used for a participant.
Gyro sensor Z axis
Magnetic sensor Z axis
Magnetic sensor X axis
Magnetic sensor Y axis
Approximated response time
synchronized with the video.
These data are
synchronized with the video.
Baseline for
integral of rotation
Rotation timings are matched to the response times.
Rotation amount calculated by
integral based on the baseline
(a) Rotation amount
measurement
(b) Response time
measurement
Figure 3: Measurement methods of the approximated response times and the rotation amounts at the body balance controls
against the acoustic cues. The response time is measured from the beginning of the sound pan recognized by the magnetic
sensor data. The rotation amount is measured by the integral of the gyro sensor data corresponding to the changing timings
of the response time.
trated in Figure 1, which dynamic range varies in
16384 < s < 16384 where s is the sample value.
These indicate the walking direction to the partic-
ipant. The pan change uses two functions: Hevi-
side and Sigmoid. The Sigmoid function changes
the sound pan smoothly. The changing time from
one side to another takes a second and the same
sound pan is also kept for a second (Figure 1(a)).
Totally during two seconds one of the sound pans
is outputted. But the Heviside one changes the
sound pan suddenly. The length is two seconds
for the same sound pan (Figure 1(b)). The last
type is the center sound pan that is constructed
by 440Hz with 16 bit sound resolution, which the
dynamic range is varied in 8192 < s < 8192 for
the sample value s (Figure 1(c)). The (a), (b) and
(c) are randomly appears during the experiment
as the auditory cues for guiding the direction. The
participant follows the direction of the sound pan.
We just requested them to turn to the direction as
they recognized. In the case of the center sound
pan, we just requested the participants to walk in
straight. We have prepared five sequences with
the auditory cues for the experiment, in which
the total time of a sequence is 56 seconds. Each
participant tried these five sequences, where the
sighted participant wears an eye mask for the ex-
periments. Finally the sighted participant also at-
tended in an additional 6th experience without the
eye mask using another acoustic cue sequence.
Measurement of the Body Balance Control dur-
ing the Experiment: A sensor system originally
equipped with a 400 dps 3D gyro sensor (In-
venSense IDG-400 × 2), a 2.5G 3D accelerome-
ter (Freescale MMA7261QT) and a 3D magnetic
sensor (Aichi Steel AMI602) was introduced to
the experiment. All sensors can achieve up to
200Hz sampling rate and have 12bit resolution
(Texas Instruments TLV2553IPW) for each data.
Therefore, the experiment applies 5 msec to the
sampling time resolution. The data of accelerom-
eter illustrates the timings of legs’ movement dur-
ing the walking of participant. The gyro sen-
sor measures the rotation amount of participant’s
body using the absolute value from the channel of
the vertical axis against body. The magnetic sen-
sor outputs the direction data of the body that rep-
resents the starting or the ending timings of rotat-
ing the body against the auditory cues. Data mea-
surement timings from all axes of all the sensors
are synchronized by the microcontroller (Microb-
SpacePerceptionbyAcousticCuesInfluencesAuditory-inducedBodyBalanceControl
33
laze at 48MHz) implemented on a Xilinx Spar-
tan3E FPGA. If participant walking in straight,
the data from the magnetic sensor keeps the same
value.
Participants attended in the Experiment: Totally
ten participants including a mentally healthy con-
genital and two mentally healthy acquired blind-
ness persons and seven healthy sighted persons
attended in the experiment as summarized in Ta-
ble 1. Participant wear cotton thick socks to elim-
inate cognitive effect from the floor. As shown
in Figure 2, participant piggybacked the sensor
and an iPod nano put into a small jogging hol-
ster, and heard the sound pan changes from the
iPod nano via a noise canceling headphone (Sony
MDR-NC100D). The sound volume was adjusted
as the participant comfortably and clearly can hear
the sound.
We took videos of the experiment with two cam-
eras from the back and the front of each participant.
The video was used to synchronize the data from the
sensors compared with the participant’s movement.
We noted that this method did not have enough ac-
curacy for the response time from an acoustic cue be-
cause it was impossible to record the acoustic cues
heard by the participant. Therefore, regarding the
response time from an acoustic cue to the body bal-
ance control, we request to participants to move their
hands up and down during the starting cues, and then
we synchronize the movement from the video as the
starting point of the acoustic cue sequence. More-
over, because the hand movement was recorded in the
sensor data (especially in the accelerometer data), we
synchronized the movement confirmed by the video
approximately with the sensor data (Figure 3(b)). Fi-
nally we used the rate of the approximate response
time where one of the response times was used as the
base time. We explained the detail of this calculation
in the next section using the realistic cases.
On the other hand, we also focus on the rotation
amount to measure the dynamic volume of body bal-
ance controls induced by the acoustic cues. We in-
tegrate the area more than or less than the baseline
related to the behavior of the response time as shown
in Figure 3(a). This integral regions represent the ro-
tation amount induced by the acoustic cues without
time dependency.
3.2 Hypothesis for the Expected Results
Measuring the approximated response time and the
rotation amount by the experiment, we expect that
seven hypotheses can be approved as enumerated be-
low:
1. The response time differs depending on the
changing function of the sound pan: Changing
the sound pan with the Heviside function induces
faster response to body balance control than the
Sigmoid one.
2. Training the body balance control by the sound
pan change affects to the response time: The num-
ber of sequences in the experiment that a partici-
pant tried affects to his/her response time against
the sound pan change.
3. The response time differs depending on partici-
pant’s age: Age affects to the response time from
the pan change recognition to the body balance.
4. The response time of blindness people becomes
shorter than the one of the sighted: the blindness
promotes keen auditory sense and induces shorter
response time from the sound pan change to the
body balance control than the sighted.
5. There exists left or right bias with respect to the
hypothesis 1: The response time differs depend-
ing on participant’s dominant arm/leg.
6. Rotation amount induced by the sound pan change
differs between the Heviside and the Sigmoid
function: The body balance control induces larger
rotation amount when the Heviside function is
used for the sound pan change than the sigmoid
function or vise versa.
7. The center pan is misunderstood after the previ-
ous sound pan is changed from right or left: The
sound pan sequences in the order of right, left and
center or in the one of left, right and center induce
misrecognition of the center pan perceived by the
participant.
8. Vision influences the response time against the
sound pan change: When the sighted people use
their vision, their response times against the sound
pan change with the Heviside or the Sigmoid
function differs from the ones without sight.
The hypotheses 1-5 and 8 are related to the re-
sponse time against the sound pan. These hypothe-
ses can be analyzed by the approximate response time
compared with the rates calculated by the division
with the one of the compared response times. The
hypothesis 6 is analyzed by using the rotation amount
measured by the gyro sensor. It is available to eval-
uate the rates calculated by the division of the com-
paring rotation amount with the compared rotation
amount. Thus, we performed the experiment and an-
alyzed the acquired data applying the methods men-
tioned above. Thus the next section will show the re-
sults and investigate the hypotheses.
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4 RESULTS
4.1 Found Fundamental Knowledge
Regarding the hypothesis 2, 3 and 5, we compared
the approximated response times and the rotation
amounts among blindness/sighted, ages, sex, domi-
nant hand/leg of all participants and the number of
trials. The comparison is performed under these con-
ditions; 1) the approximated response times and the
rotation amounts are compared based on every exper-
iment in five trials, 2) we compared results among the
sound pan change patterns categorized into four pat-
terns; Heviside or sigmoid function and the sound pan
change of right-to-left or left-to-right, and 3) we com-
pared the normalized rates by the right-to-left pattern
with Heviside function. However, we were not able to
find any relation among all data. The data is randomly
spread and independent in each participant. There-
fore, we conclude that the hypothesis 2, 3 and 5 were
not found.
According to this conclusion regarding these fail-
ures of the hypotheses, we apply new conditions be-
low to evaluate other hypotheses 1, 4, 6-8:
1. Due to the failure of the hypothesis 2 regarding
effect for multiple trials, we can use the average
data (mean) from the ve trials of a participant’s
experiment for comparing with other participants’
results.
2. Due to the failure of the hypothesis 3 regarding
effect of age of participant, we can compare data
among different ages of participants.
3. Due to the failure of the hypothesis 5 regardingef-
fect of dominant direction of participant, we can
directly compare both data regarding the sound
pan change patterns of right-to-left and left-to-
right without considering participant’s dominant
hand/leg.
According to the fundamental knowledge dis-
cussed above, the comparisons of the sensor data will
be performed regarding four categories of observa-
tions: 1) the response time, 2) the rotation amount, 3)
the auditory-space perception and 4) the interference
of vision. Let us discuss the observations respectively.
4.2 Observations regarding Response
Time
First, let us focus on the difference of changing sound
patterns. We have found that the difference of chang-
ing patterns regarding sound pan change among the
Sigmoid and the Heviside functions influences the
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
A B C D E F G H I J
L to R (Heviside)
R to L (Heviside)
L to R (Sigmoid)
R to L (Sigmoid)
Part. L to R R to L L to R R to L
(Heviside) (Heviside) (Sigmoid) (Sigmoid)
A 1.000 0.857 1.909 1.477
B 1.000 1.069 1.716 1.626
C 1.000 1.035 1.655 1.360
D 1.000 1.166 2.238 1.767
E 1.000 0.877 3.300 2.734
F 1.000 1.229 2.393 2.039
G 1.000 0.902 4.039 3.835
H 1.000 1.009 7.717 4.614
I 1.000 1.127 2.997 2.274
J 1.000 0.899 2.228 2.491
Figure 4: Comparison of the response time rates among all
participants normalized by the 1) left-to-right sound pan
change for investigating the hypothesis 1. Any partici-
pant responses against the sound pan changes with Sigmoid
function more slowly than the one with Heviside because
the means of the sound pan change types 2), 3) and 4) be-
come larger than 1.00.
body balance control, which confirms the hypothe-
sis 1. Especially we confirm the truth that the sound
pan change with the Heviside function induces shorter
response time than the one with the Sigmoid.
We first categorized the sound pan change patterns
into four types; 1) left-to-right change with Hevi-
side function, 2) right-to-left one with Heviside func-
tion, 3) left-to-right one with Sigmoid function and
4) right-to-left one with Sigmoid function. Applying
the condition 1 in section 4.1, we have calculated the
means of the response times regarding the four sound
pan change types in five time trials per participant
including all the blindness and the sighted with eye
mask. Figure 4 shows rates normalized by the type 1)
of the means of the response times categorized to each
participant. Note that A, B and C are the blindness
people and others are the sighted. Every participant
begins to turn their body at the sound pan change with
Sigmoid function in a longer response time than the
one with Heviside function. Thus, we confirm that
the smooth pan change induces slow response to the
body balance control.
Next, regarding the response time to the sound pan
change with the Sigmoid function, we have found that
SpacePerceptionbyAcousticCuesInfluencesAuditory-inducedBodyBalanceControl
35
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
L to R (Heviside) R to L (Heviside) L to R (Sigmoid) R to L (Sigmoid)
Blind
Sighted
Part. L to R R to L L to R R to L
(Hev.) (Hev.) (Sig.) (Sig.)
Blindness 1.000 0.987 1.760 1.488
Sighted 1.000 1.030 3.559 2.822
Figure 5: Comparison of the rate of the response times
among blindness and sighted participants to investigate the
hypothesis 4. The means are normalized by the case of the
sound pan change from left to right with Heviside function.
Focusing on the rates of Sigmoid function, we confirm that
the rates of blindness participants are smaller than the ones
of the sighted. This means that the blindness people has a
keen space perception from the sound and also can be in-
duced by the acoustic cue to the fast body balance control.
the blindness people are induced by the sound pan
change in shorter time than the sighted people when
the sighted people do not use their vision (shutting out
the vision with eye mask).
To confirm this hypothesis, as shown in the Fig-
ure 5, we have calculated the means of the rates used
for the analysis in the hypothesis 1 comparing among
the blindness and the sighted participants. Although
both participants have the potential delay against the
sound pan change types with Sigmoid function due
to the hypothesis 1, the rates of the sighted partici-
pants of Sigmoid function become larger than the one
of blindness participants in both cases of the types 1)
and 3) or 2) and 4). This confirms the hypothesis 4.
Thus, we have confirmed that the blindness people are
able to perceive the beginning of smooth pan change
keener than the sighted ones.
4.3 Observation regarding Rotation
Amount
We have found that the rotation amount of body bal-
ance control induced by the sound pan change with
the Heviside function is larger than the one with the
Sigmoid, which confirms the hypothesis 6.
According to the condition 1 and 2 in section 4.1,
we calculated the means of the rotation amounts as
explained in section 3.1 and analyzed the rates of
the Sigmoid cases normalized by the Heviside one as
shown in Figure 7. The values in the columns of the
Sigmoid cases of left-to-right/right-to-left sound pan
changes are normalized by the ones of the same sound
pan change with Heviside function. The almost all
mean values in the graph are less than 1.0. Although
the right-to-left case of the participant E and the left-
to-right case of the participant I show larger values
than 1.000, it is still less than 1.1, which is less than
10% difference. This means that the rotation amounts
of the Heviside cases become larger than the ones of
the Sigmoid. Thus, the sudden sound pan change in-
duces larger rotation at the body balance control than
the smooth sound pan change.
4.4 Observation regarding
Auditory-space Perception
We have a question that if the change of sound pans
can guide the precise direction of the participant un-
der a dynamic body balance control such as walking.
Now, regarding the hypothesis 7, we have found that
the blindness people, especially congenital blindness,
are able to have more precise space perception to de-
tect the sound direction by the acoustic cues than the
acquired blindness and the sighted people without vi-
sion. Moreover, the congenital blindness people are
able to induce the body balance control to the correct
direction.
We focused on the sound pan change sequences
in the order of left-right-center or right-left-center,
and counted the number of times when a) partici-
pant walked straightly followingthe center sound pan,
b) participant turned to wrong direction, and c) partic-
ipant ignored the center sound pan (i.e. he/she turns
to the previous sound pan direction before the cen-
ter pan) as shown in Table 2. The table shows the
percentages of the types a), b) and c) against the to-
tal number of times of the focused sound change se-
quences appeared in the five trials of the experiment.
In the sound pan change sequences include 4 times
per whole experiment trial. A participant should re-
ceive 20 times of the sound pan change sequence in-
cluding the center sound pan in an experiment trial.
According to the table, we confirm that the congen-
ital blindness has 95% of the correct recognition to
the center sound pan direction and controls their body
balance in front. This shows that they have a very
keen space perception when they construct their space
imagination using the acoustic cues.
On the other hand, the acquired blindness peo-
ple have recognized the center pan correctly only for
20%. The sighted participants without vision have
behaved in just 2% for the correct recognition of the
center sound pan, and also misunderstood the center
sound pan returned from a side as it is changing to the
opposite sound pan direction from the previous sound
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(a) Congenital blindness
(b) Acquired blindness
(c) Sighted
False
False
False
False
Correct
Correct Correct
Correct
False False False False
Starting Signals
(Center Pan)
Finalizing Signals
(Center Pan)
Left Sound
(Changing with
Sigmoid Function)
Center Sound
Right Sound
(Changing with
Sigmoid Function)
Right Sound
(Changing with
Heaviside Function)
Left Sound
(Changing with
Heaviside Function)
(a-1)
(a-2) (a-3)
(a-4)
(b-1)
(b-2) (b-3)
(b-4)
(c-1)
(c-2)
(c-3)
(c-4)
Magnetics
Sensor
(X axis)
Magnetics
Sensor
(Y axis)
Magnetics Sensor (Z axis)
Figure 6: Comparison of the three-axis magnetic sensor data synchronized with the sound pan change timings among (a)
congenital, (b) acquired blindness, and (c) the sighted participants to investigate the hypothesis 7. This comparison shows an
experiment trial. The congenital blindness participant perfectly perceives the center pan after the left-to-right acoustic cues.
However, the acquired blindness and sighted participants fails to perceive the center pan.
pan. This means that the sight is somehow involved to
recognize the space perception created by the acous-
tic cues even if the sight has been acquired for a long
time after we have experienced visible.
Figure 6 shows one of the experiment sequence
tried by the participant A (congenital blindness), the
participant B (acquired blindness) and the participant
D (sighted without vision). Lines in the graphs of the
figure show three axes of the magnetic sensor. While
the participants continue to turn their body direction
during the sound pan change, the sensor data of the
axes are changing. Regarding the sound data in the
graph, there are three starting cues in the center pan at
the beginning, the left sound pan of red part and the
right one of blue part. The purple part in the graph is
the center pan. The triangle shaped purple part in the
graph is the mixing timing of the Sigmoid function.
Let us explain an significant case when the congeni-
tal blind participant perceives the center pan precisely
after right-to-left sound pan change shown in Fig-
ure 6(a-2). The corresponding timings of the acquired
blindness and the sighted as shown in Figure 6(b-2)
and (c-2) respectively show that both participants mis-
understood the sound pan direction to their right side.
Thus, we have confirmed that the space perception
by acoustic cues of the participants who have expe-
rienced the sight in their life was weakened due to
somehow influences of their memory of vision.
4.5 Interference of Vision
Finally, we have found that the sighted people re-
sponses faster against the sound pan change with Sig-
moid function when their vision is available.
After the five time experiment trials of the sighted
participants without vision, we performed an addi-
tional experiment without eye mask. In the experi-
ment, the participant can use their vision and follows
the same instructions for the experiment as the one
without vision. We measured the response times and
calculated the rates as considered as the evidences of
the hypothesis 1. When we calculated the subtrac-
tions of the rates in the case with vision from the one
without vision, all the subtractions become positive
SpacePerceptionbyAcousticCuesInfluencesAuditory-inducedBodyBalanceControl
37
values (i.e. rate without vision rate with vision > 0)
as shown in Figure 8. Thus, the response time rates
normalized by the Heviside case without vision al-
ways become larger than the ones with vision. This
means that the perception of the sound pan direction
change with vision in the case of Sigmoid function
induces body balance control in a shorter time than
the perception without vision. As well as the hypoth-
esis 7, the vision involves somehow the space percep-
tion by the acoustic cues and also influences auditory-
induced body balance control.
5 DISCUSSION
Let us summarize the results and discuss the findings
explored during the previous sections. We summarize
the findings again regarding the hypotheses:
1. A sudden sound pan change induces fast response
to both blindness and sighted people according to
the hypothesis 1.
2. A sudden sound pan change induces large rota-
tion of body balance control to both blindness and
sighted people according to the hypothesis 6.
3. Blindness people perceive smooth sound pan
change keener than the sighted people according
to the hypothesis 4.
4. Congenital blindness people perceive sound pan
direction correctly according to the hypothesis 7.
5. The vision promotes quick response for auditory-
induced body balance control due to the hypothe-
sis 8.
These findings are considerable to be applied to
engineering application and society design. Due to
the findings 1 and 2 above, we can use it for engi-
neering application such as the biofeedback system
based on sound guide. The different types of the au-
ditory cue change such as Hevisideand Sigmoid made
by the feedback system will induce different effect to
body balance control. When a fast body balance con-
trol and a large body rotation are required for correct-
ing the balance control by a feedback system, we can
apply the findings 1 and 2 to induce those potential
body balance controls with different speed. For exam-
ple, during the training of skiing to perform a beau-
tiful Wedeln with the correct timing of the parallel
turns, this feedback system using the findings 1 and
2, which feedbacks the rhythm of the turns sensed by
accelerometer, will become valid for mastering high
level skill. Thus the outcomes from the experiment in
this paper are clearly applicable and important in real-
istic engineering field and the sports sciences applica-
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
A B C D E F G H I J
L to R (Sigmoid)
R to L (Sigmoid)
Part. L to R (Sig.) R to L (Sig.)
A 0.832 0.629
B 0.862 0.593
C 0.654 0.505
D 0.793 0.709
E 0.914 1.050
F 0.829 0.860
G 0.878 0.282
H 0.932 0.962
I 1.022 0.904
J 0.791 0.800
Figure 7: Comparison among rates of rotation amounts of
all participants divided by the ones with Heviside functions
of the left-to-right sound pan change to investigate the hy-
pothesis 6. The rate values in the graph show that the Sig-
moid case induces less body rotation than the Heviside one.
tions that can modify the future body balance control
correctly by acoustic cues.
On the other hand, we have found that blindness
people have superior ability to perceive the space than
the sighted people due to the findings 3 and 4. The
blindness people seem to have their stable origin of
their axes defined at their center of body. Moreover
the origin of the axes is stably fixed to the defined
place even if the body balance control is influenced by
the acoustic cues. The finding 4 shows the evidence
of the space perception ability of blindness people,
which can be said as an affordance of blindness. Sur-
prisingly although congenital blindness people have
clearly the ability, the acquired ones do not. We can
draw an inference that if any people have experienced
vision in their life, memory of vision influences some-
how the origin of the axes placed in the center of body
by the acoustic cues. The space perception of the ac-
quired and the sighted people is dulled by their sub-
liminal vision image, and thus the matching between
their space perceived by the acoustic cues and the per-
ception of center of their body is distorted.
Finally the finding 5 means that the vision pro-
motes the correct space perception and quick body
balance control induced by the acoustic cues. It has
not been explored the reason why the vision induces
the quick response. However the experimental result
implies that the vision accelerates somehow the quick
response against the auditory cues. The sighted peo-
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Table 2: To investigate the hypothesis 7, comparison of re-
sponse types and the number of times in each type when
the center pan appears in the experiment trials among con-
genital and acquired blindness, and the sighted participants
without vision. The types are; a) correctly perceiving the
center sound pan and walking without rotation (straightly),
b) incorrectly perceiving the center sound pan and rotating
the body to the opposite direction of the previous sound pan,
and c) continuing the previous rotating movement without
perceiving the center sound pan.
Part. Type a Type b Type c Total times
Congenital 95% 5% 0% 20
Acquired 20% 80% 0% 40
Sighted 2% 94% 4% 140
Part. L to R (Sig.) R to L (Sig.)
D 0.431 0.182
E 1.573 1.060
F 0.879 0.697
G 1.756 1.305
H 5.395 3.027
I 0.530 0.301
J 0.739 0.851
Figure 8: Regarding the sound pan change patterns with
Sigmoid function, comparison among sighted participants
with subtracting the calculated response time rates with vi-
sion (without eye mask) from the one without vision (with
eye mask) to investigate the hypothesis 8. The subtraction
is performed between the Heviside and the Sigmoid cases
corresponding to the same sound pan change patterns that
are the left-to-right and the right-to-left ones respectively.
All data in this graph show positive values. This means that
the participants with vision perceive the sound pan change
with Sigmoid function in shorter time than the one without
vision.
ple would control their body balance with their eye-
ball movements simultaneously to exploit their quick
responses against auditory cues.
Considering the finding 3,4 and 5, let us discuss
some meanings of the findings in the society. In the
conventional training on gymnastics, it is not good
method to exploit the gymnast’s potential ability by
disabling his/her vision with eye mask if he/she is not
a congenital blindness because the space perception
by the auditory stimuli around him/her becomes un-
certain. We can say that much better method to ex-
ploit the sighted gymnast’s potential ability should be
the training technique validating their vision with be-
ing aware of sounds in the environment. This method
will induce quickly to master correct body balance
control. Another example is to go to the tunnel with
driving a car. We need to have much attention to de-
tect the driving direction because our eyes are fixed to
the front of the car as the same situation of the exper-
iment mentioned in this paper with eye mask. How-
ever, the sounds are coming all around the car due to
the reflections of the sounds from the wall of the tun-
nel. The driver would lose his/her space perception
from the acoustic stimuli surrounding the car without
dynamic vision.
In the society design, we warn troublesome caused
by the situations where the acoustic cues influence
the body balance control related to the findings 3, 4
and 5. For example, we can meet the situation where
an old person or a child stands on Median of a large
road. The body balance control of the person is influ-
enced to the opposite side against the vision because
the acoustic cues are moving on the opposite side of
the cars running in front of the person. Thus it is very
important to eliminate this kind of dangerousenviron-
ments where the changing direction of acoustic cue
is opposite to the vision stimuli. Moreover, recently
we can easily see the people who walk with operat-
ing a smart phone in a street. They are trying to per-
ceive the environment surrounding him/her from the
acoustic stimuli. However, as we confirmed by the
experiments in this paper, this activity is very danger-
ous because their vision is disabled by focusing on
the screen on the phone. This accelerates unstable
space perception due to dulling their origins of axes
recognized by the acoustic stimuli. Additionally the
condition to percept the space has become worse in
these days due to wearing headphone to listen to mu-
sic from the phone. While he/she with a headphone
walks in a street with making an email sentences on
a phone, if a car is passing in front of him/her, he/she
should delay to respond to the sound of the car and
will have an accident. Thus, not only the vision, it
should be very important to design the society or the
products considering the auditory effects considering
both the vision and the auditory.
6 CONCLUSIONS
This paper investigates the influence to the space per-
ception when acoustic cues are inputted to blindness
and sighted people during walking. We performed ex-
periments to investigate eight hypothesis and found
SpacePerceptionbyAcousticCuesInfluencesAuditory-inducedBodyBalanceControl
39
that the five hypotheses are confirmed: 1) The speed
for body balance control is affected by the sound pan
change type. 2) The rotation amount for body bal-
ance control is affected by the sound pan change type.
3) The blindness people has keener perception for
the auditory cues than the sighted. 4) The congeni-
tal blindness people has a very stable axes that is not
moved by the acoustic cues. And finally 5) the sighted
people responses quicker against a smooth sound cue
with vision than without vision.
These findings outcome the relations among the
acoustic stimuli and the auditory-induced body bal-
ance control during a dynamic movement because the
vection was only the cognitive and psychologicalmat-
ter which is detected internally in the participants on
a stable posture. Our findings can be applied to en-
gineering applications and the social design to warn
the dangerousness when the sighted people lose the
vision. Recently we meet such situations in many
places. We warn to improve our life style to use vi-
sion with acoustic as much as possible. However, it
is not sure that the absolute reasons such as the re-
lated brain parts and the psychological affects to the
response quickness or the misperception of the center
sound pan. Therefore, expecting an electroencephalo-
graph or a small fMRI used in a walking situation,
we will continuously explore the main reason why the
findings in this paper occur so far.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank to teachers of blind school in Kochi prefec-
ture, especially to Prof. Iida who accepted our offer
for the experiments. This research is partially sup-
ported by the KAKENHI No. 23650409 of Grant-in-
Aid for Challenging Exploratory Research, and No.
20240060 and 24240085 of Grant-in-Aid for Scien-
tific Research (A) funded by Japan Society for the
Promotion of Science (JSPS) and also is partially sup-
ported by the JST PRESTO program and Tateisi Sci-
ence and Technology Foundation.
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