Copyright © 2008 IEEEEcholocating mammals such as bats, whales and dolphins have been using waveform diversity for over 50 million years. Synthetic systems such as sonar and radar have existed for fewer than 100 years. Given the extraordinary capability of echolocating mammals it seems self-evident that designers of radar (and sonar) systems may be able to learn lessons that may potentially revolutionize current radar-based capability leading to truly autonomous navigation, collision avoidance, and automatic target classification. Echolocating mammals have been little studied in relation to the operation of radar and sonar systems. In this article, we introduce a range of strategies employed by bats and consider how these might be exploitab...
Bat sonar is an active sense that is based on the common mammalian auditory system. Bats emit echolo...
Echolocating bats show a unique ability to detect, resolve and discriminate targets. The Spectrogram...
Echolocation has evolved in different groups of animals, from bats and cetaceans to birds and humans...
In the context of radar and sonar systems, the potential of applying the techniques of echolocating ...
Modern radar and sonar systems rely on active sensing to accomplish a variety of tasks, including de...
The natural world has an unquantifiable complexity and natural life exhibits remarkable techniques f...
Classification of targets is a key problem of modern radar and sonar systems. This is an activity c...
Echolocating insectivorous bats are nocturnal mammals that capture fast, erratically moving insects ...
Echolocating bats have evolved the ability to detect, resolve and discriminate targets in highly cha...
Bats are capable of imaging their surroundings in great detail using echolocation. To apply similar ...
This study explores the principles of echolocation in bats which can be potentially adopted for bio-...
Nature provides a number of examples where acoustic echolocation is the primary sensing modality, th...
Ultrasonic emissions of bats are directional and delimit the echo-acoustic space. Directionality is ...
Bats are the only mammals capable of true flight, and are the second-most speciose mammalian radiati...
Echolocating bats have evolved an excellent ability to detect and discriminate targets in highly cha...
Bat sonar is an active sense that is based on the common mammalian auditory system. Bats emit echolo...
Echolocating bats show a unique ability to detect, resolve and discriminate targets. The Spectrogram...
Echolocation has evolved in different groups of animals, from bats and cetaceans to birds and humans...
In the context of radar and sonar systems, the potential of applying the techniques of echolocating ...
Modern radar and sonar systems rely on active sensing to accomplish a variety of tasks, including de...
The natural world has an unquantifiable complexity and natural life exhibits remarkable techniques f...
Classification of targets is a key problem of modern radar and sonar systems. This is an activity c...
Echolocating insectivorous bats are nocturnal mammals that capture fast, erratically moving insects ...
Echolocating bats have evolved the ability to detect, resolve and discriminate targets in highly cha...
Bats are capable of imaging their surroundings in great detail using echolocation. To apply similar ...
This study explores the principles of echolocation in bats which can be potentially adopted for bio-...
Nature provides a number of examples where acoustic echolocation is the primary sensing modality, th...
Ultrasonic emissions of bats are directional and delimit the echo-acoustic space. Directionality is ...
Bats are the only mammals capable of true flight, and are the second-most speciose mammalian radiati...
Echolocating bats have evolved an excellent ability to detect and discriminate targets in highly cha...
Bat sonar is an active sense that is based on the common mammalian auditory system. Bats emit echolo...
Echolocating bats show a unique ability to detect, resolve and discriminate targets. The Spectrogram...
Echolocation has evolved in different groups of animals, from bats and cetaceans to birds and humans...