Sagot :
True
Both passive and active echolocation help blind individuals learn about their environments. Because sighted individuals learn about their environments using vision, they often do not readily perceive echoes from nearby objects. This is due to an echo suppression phenomenon brought on by the precedence effect.
Blind humans have been known to use echolocation to "see" their environment, but even sighted people can learn the skill, a new study finds. Study participants learned to echolocate, or glean information about surroundings by bouncing sound waves off surfaces, in a virtual environment
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Answer:
true
Explanation:
Blind humans have been known to use echolocation to "see" their environment, but even sighted people can learn the skill, a new study finds. Study participants learned to echolocate, or glean information about surroundings by bouncing sound waves off surfaces, in a virtual environment.