Detection of passageways in natural foliage using biomimetic sonar.

Bioinspir Biomim

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, United States of America.

Published: August 2022

The ability of certain bat species to navigate in dense vegetation based on trains of short biosonar echoes could provide for an alternative parsimonious approach to obtaining the sensory information that is needed to achieve autonomy in complex natural environments. Although bat biosonar has much lower data rates and spatial (angular) resolution than commonly used human-made sensing systems such as LiDAR or stereo cameras, bat species that live in dense habitats have the ability to reliably detect narrow passageways in foliage. To study the sensory information that the animals may have available to accomplish this, we have used a biomimetic sonar system that was combined with a camera to record echoes and synchronized images from 10 different field sites that featured narrow passageways in foliage. The synchronized camera and sonar data allowed us to create a large data set (130 000 samples) of labeled echoes using a teacher-student approach that used class labels derived from the images to provide training data for echo-based classifiers. The performance achieved in detecting passageways based on the field data closely matched previous results obtained for gaps in an artificial foliage setup in the laboratory. With a deep feature extraction neural network (VGG16) a foliage-versus-passageway classification accuracy of 96.64% was obtained. A transparent artificial intelligence approach (class-activation mapping) indicated that the classifier network relied heavily on the initial rising flank of the echoes. This finding could be exploited with a neuromorphic echo representation that consisted of times where the echo envelope crossed a certain amplitude threshold in a given frequency channel. Whereas a single amplitude threshold was sufficient for this in the previous laboratory study, multiple thresholds were needed to achieve an accuracy of 92.23%. These findings indicate that despite many sources of variability that shape clutter echoes from natural environments, these signals contain sufficient sensory information to enable the detection of passageways in foliage.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ac7affDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

passageways foliage
12
detection passageways
8
biomimetic sonar
8
bat species
8
needed achieve
8
natural environments
8
narrow passageways
8
amplitude threshold
8
foliage
5
echoes
5

Similar Publications

Detection of passageways in natural foliage using biomimetic sonar.

Bioinspir Biomim

August 2022

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, United States of America.

The ability of certain bat species to navigate in dense vegetation based on trains of short biosonar echoes could provide for an alternative parsimonious approach to obtaining the sensory information that is needed to achieve autonomy in complex natural environments. Although bat biosonar has much lower data rates and spatial (angular) resolution than commonly used human-made sensing systems such as LiDAR or stereo cameras, bat species that live in dense habitats have the ability to reliably detect narrow passageways in foliage. To study the sensory information that the animals may have available to accomplish this, we have used a biomimetic sonar system that was combined with a camera to record echoes and synchronized images from 10 different field sites that featured narrow passageways in foliage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bioinspired solution to finding passageways in foliage with sonar.

Bioinspir Biomim

November 2021

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, United States of America.

Finding narrow gaps in foliage is an important component skill for autonomous navigation in densely vegetated environments. Traditional approaches are based on collecting large amounts of data with high spatial resolution. However, the biosonar systems of bats that live in dense habitats demonstrate that finding gaps is possible based on sensors with angular resolutions that are poor compared to technologies such as man-made sonar and lidar.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!