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  • Hey, it's me Destin welcome back to Smarter Every Day

  • I'm in the middle of the woods. My son lost a cheap little drone

  • and the only way we can figure out where it's at is we are powering it up and

  • listening to where it is, and it's really got me thinking about

  • directional hearing.

  • To bring you up to speed real quick, my sister bought my son a toy drone which of course he immediately went outside and

  • flew as high as he could and let the wind carry it off into the woods,

  • way out of sight. All we knew is that it was in a huge section of the forest.

  • Now, problem-solving is an important skill that I always try to teach my children

  • So, first I'll let him wander around aimlessly for a bit - of course not finding it

  • and then I decided it was time to start our little adventure.

  • First, we all spread out in the woods and got real quiet

  • We then activated the drone and used our directional hearing to see if we thought we knew where it was coming from.

  • It was super faint so each walked in the direction.

  • We thought it was coming from and we all stopped, got quiet again, and then reactivated it.

  • At this time, we were a little bit closer. So we felt more confident with our directional hearing and we moved in that direction.

  • With three of us, we were able to easily triangulate it even though

  • we couldn't see it, but this is where it got weird. We had absolutely no idea how far up the tree it was.

  • It was like our directional hearing somehow worked in the horizontal plane

  • But in the vertical plane it just didn't work.

  • Right now we've isolated it to this tree. We think

  • but we're not really sure...

  • exactly where. But we're using our stereo hearing in order to find it. It's really cool

  • Son's bringing some binoculars.

  • Look up in the tree. That's where I hear it

  • It is in that tree.

  • I hear it in that tree.

  • Okay

  • Where?

  • For you, you see that branch right there and the branch is covering it up.

  • Oh, do it again.

  • There it is

  • That's it. Okay. I think we can do this.

  • Son, go get a rifle.

  • So we found it just in time you got it. Yeah, do it up?

  • You're freaking awesome. Did it come down?

  • Safe the weapon, stand by.

  • Ah ah ah

  • Get back!

  • Get on the ground

  • Make sure the weapon's cold

  • I know we're excited, let's be safe.

  • We did it.

  • We got it!

  • Weapon's safe, let's go get it.

  • All right, Aunt Briley gave you a Christmas present and then she saved your Christmas present. So that's pretty cool.

  • That is the power of the directional hearing that our bodies have because if you think about it

  • One ear to the other one if I have a sound on this side

  • the sound hits this ear one millisecond before it hits this ear and

  • The higher frequencies are muffled out by the time it gets over here because that sound goes across my face

  • We just use that to find this. But you know what I think is interesting?

  • How can you find something? How did you know it was up high?

  • I don't know. I don't either.

  • This is a really good question

  • Think about it.

  • If there's a sound directly in front of you, and you hear it

  • It's stimulating

  • both of your ears at the exact same time

  • Because the distance is the same, right? If you take that same sound and you move it vertically, the same is true

  • So you can't resolve a vertical position directly in front of you with temporal cues, meaning time.

  • It has to be something else.

  • It wasn't until I found an experiment performed on the YouTube channel called Scilabus that

  • I understood the answer to the problem.

  • It's called spectral cues.

  • If you think about a sound across the room,

  • it's going to go to your ear and bounce off of your ear and down into your ear hole

  • If you have a sound from below,

  • It's going to bounce off a different part of your ear and then into your ear hole

  • That is going to change the sound before it goes into your body and your brain has developed this complex algorithm

  • It has to do with the area of study called psycho acoustics, and it will tell your brain

  • Exactly where it is in the vertical axis based on frequency and spectral cues and that is amazing.

  • I watched a video on Vivian's channel, Scilabus, about how to test this

  • and you can do this at your own home, so I would encourage you to go watch her video

  • But I wanted to do it with my son, so we're going to illustrate this with my son here

  • See we've got this big setup. What I'm going to do is I'm going to take my hands and

  • I'm going to clap it like this (clapping) and you point to exactly the spot where the sound is coming from.

  • Can you do that? Try it. (clapping)

  • Are you cool being blindfolded? "I'm fine with that."

  • Okay, here's the deal, his brain is calibrated for the spectral cues off of his shaped ear. If we were to pack

  • Play-Doh in the pinna, that's going to change the spectrum that comes down into his ear

  • and he's not going to be able to calculate the position in the vertical axis.

  • I learned this from Scilabus. Vivian did a really cool experiment go check it out on her channel.

  • Anyway, let's do the clappy thing again.

  • So what you'll notice is if we're on the left or the right, he gets it almost every time,

  • but he has a hard time with the vertical axis. He can't even tell if it's forward or back

  • I was clapping right between your legs and you pointed up.

  • "What?"

  • Do you realize how awesome that is? Let's just use all the big words.

  • We just derailed the psycho-acoustic filter in my son's brain by negating his ability to use

  • temporal cues because of the position of the sound, but

  • driving him to not being able to trust his spectral cues because we dampened down the pinna

  • which is the floppy parts on the outside of his head by using Play-doh.

  • So he couldn't figure out where the sound was coming from.

  • That's fascinating. The cool thing about this is that dogs don't really do it that well.

  • Have you ever said something to a dog and he kind of does his head like that?

  • What he's doing is he's trying to cheat a little bit. The dog's putting one year above the other so they can

  • resolve vertical position. That's amazing. They're using temporal cues.

  • They're cheating with temporal cues to try to get something that we get with spectral cues

  • I've never thought about this, and the reason that's important is because I have a whole YouTube channel

  • you didn't know about, probably. It's called The Sound Traveler. I have been recording video for years now

  • where I put bineural microphones in my ear

  • And if you wear headphones and watch the video that I'm recording it tricks your brain into thinking you're there based on these temporal cues.

  • Okay, tell them about the thing we do. Briley: "So there's a second YouTube channel. It's called The Sound Traveler.

  • We go around the world and we record experiences with bineural audio.

  • I've gone to Thailand and DC.

  • Destin's done Iceland, Germany..." I went to Iceland and Germany

  • Briley: "Yup, we're going to Colombia soon. Uh, and it's it's a really chill channel.

  • It's just like experiencing travel in a different way." Yeah, it's pretty cool

  • It's not like a full-on like trying to win youtube kind of thing,

  • but it's an experiment in immersive 3D audio with a GoPro on your head. It's really fun!

  • Anyway, I think you'll dig it.

  • Briley: "If you have headphones on, just go check it out." Yeah, put your headphones on, check it out.

  • It's called The Sound Traveler. I'll leave the link in the video description

  • I would love to get that over a hundred thousand subscribers. It's something I really love.

  • Ok that's it for this episode of Smarter Every Day. I hope you enjoyed it.

  • You may know that Audible's been sponsoring Smarter Every Day for a really long time. I love it.

  • I love to use my ears to get smarter and I do that with Audible.

  • If you want to check out a free trial go to audible.com/smarter.

  • We've recently started introducing audible books to my children who loved it.

  • Here's a hack for you. If you want to get like five books for the price of one,

  • then get something called the enchanted collection or the adventure collection.

  • It's 40 hours of audio books like White Fang, Gulliver's Travels, all kinds of cool stuff.

  • Get the enchanted collection or the adventure collection at audible.com/smarter

  • That's it. I'll leave links to everything in the video description.

  • I hope this video earned your subscription. If not, no big deal.

  • I hope from now on if you hear a sound, you think about where it's coming from,

  • why you know it's coming from that position, whether it's temporal cues or spectral cues,

  • and I also hope every time you see a dog do this you know that he's cheating.

  • He's trying to use temporal cues instead of spectral cues which is pretty doggone cool.

  • Anyway, I'm destin, you're getting smarter every day. Have a good one.

  • Don't cheat. It's important that you don't cheat. We need the data, okay?

  • And you shot it, didn't you? Briley: "I did. I didn't mean to. I meant to shoot the branch."

  • I think that's why it came down though. Briley: "It'll still be good."

  • You realize we used all of our country super powers to do that? Briley: "Pulled out every single stop that we had."

  • Briley: "Let's zero in this - let's zero in this scope with those cans."

  • Hey man, we did! We zeroed the scope with old cans. And then we got...

Hey, it's me Destin welcome back to Smarter Every Day

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