DocumentCode
1252994
Title
Biomimetic sonar locates and recognizes objects
Author
Kuc, Roman
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Yale Univ., New Haven, CT, USA
Volume
22
Issue
4
fYear
1997
fDate
10/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
616
Lastpage
624
Abstract
An active sonar is described that adaptively changes its location and configuration in response to the echoes it observes in order to locate an object, position it at a known location, and identify it using features extracted from the echoes. The sonar consists of a center transmitter flanked by two receivers that can rotate and is positioned at the end of a robot arm that has five degree-of-freedom mobility. The sonar operates in air using Polaroid transducers that are resonant at 60 kHz with a nominal wavelength equal to 6 mm. The emitted pulse has a short duration with a useful bandwidth extending from 20 to 130 kHz. Using binaural information, the transmitter rotates to position an echo-producing object on its axis to maximize the acoustic intensity incident on the nearest echo-producing feature. The receivers rotate to maximize the echo amplitude and bandwidth. These optimizations are useful for differentiating objects. The system recognizes a collection of ball bearings, machine washers, and rubber O-rings of different sizes ranging from 0.45 to 2.54 cm, some differing by less than 1 mm in diameter. Learning is accomplished by extracting vectors of 32 echo envelope values acquired during a scan in elevation and forming a data base. Recognition is accomplished by comparing a single observed echo vector with the data base to find the least squared error match. A bent-wire paper clip illustrates the recognition of an asymmetric pose-dependent object
Keywords
biomimetics; image recognition; intelligent sensors; object recognition; robot vision; sonar imaging; 0.45 to 2.54 cm; 20 to 130 kHz; 6 mm; 60 kHz; acoustic intensity incident; active sonar; asymmetric pose-dependent object; ball bearings; bent-wire paper clip; binaural sonar; biomimetic sonar; biosensor; center transmitter; configuration; echo envelope values; echo processing; intelligent sensor; learning; location; machine washers; object recognition; rubber O-rings; signal processing; Acoustic emission; Acoustic pulses; Acoustic transducers; Bandwidth; Biomimetics; Feature extraction; Mobile robots; Resonance; Sonar; Transmitters;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/48.650828
Filename
650828
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