Sonar-Assisted Human Navigation

Students and professors develop a novel way to help those with visual impairment

Written byWake Forest University
| 4 min read
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When a biologist who studies bats and a computer scientist cross paths, amazingly cool things can happen.

Cool things such as a sonar device to assist the visually impaired.

The idea came from Wake Forest University biology professor William Conner, who for decades has been studying echolocation in bats and moths to learn more about the evolution of animal communication. Conner, who also is the David and Lelia Farr Professor of Innovation, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship, teaches a class called “Bio-inspiration and Biomimetics,” which looks at how animals and plants can inspire the design of new technologies.

He talked with Paul Pauca, an associate professor of computer science, who was immediately interested.

A collaborative project was born.

Student-driven project

Jack Janes, a senior computer science major; Dominic Prado, a senior biology major; and Ran Chang, a sophomore computer science major, began brainstorming during the first STEM incubator meeting of the Fall 2014 semester.

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