Daniel Kish: How I use sonar to navigate the world
Daniel Kish expands the perceptual toolbox of both blind and sighted humans by teaching echolocation -- the ability to observe our surroundings via sound. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
when they removed my left eye.
upon awakening from that last surgery
the intensive care nursery,
who did this to me.
your own impressions of blindness.
when I first came onto the stage,
to most of us,
and unawareness,
of the dark unknown.
my parents were not poetic.
were but matters of the mind,
and responsibilities as everyone else.
(Laughter) --
between love and fear.
in the face of challenge.
would pose a significant challenge.
how do I manage today?
used by most blind people.
departure from the stage. (Laughter)
that every imaginable mishap
up here on the stage.
as I came onto the stage --
from surfaces all around me,
with pieces of information,
in my visual cortex,
much as your brain does.
through my blindness,
of my own challenges,
as in any way remarkable.
much like anyone else
of their own challenges.
or I wouldn't be up here,
faced a challenge,
let me do a head count.
(Clicking) (Laughter)
to navigate these challenges,
which is what most of us fear, okay?
through these challenges. Okay?
is no help at all.
for just a moment, okay?
a bit of flash sonar.
of me, but I'm not going to move it.
to that same exact sound
(Pitch getting higher and lower)
of the dark side.
when you hear the panel start to move.
Daniel Kish: Good. Excellent.
(Laughter)
you guys can see with your eyes
of enjoying it more or less,
DK: Yeah.
coming back down again.
SM: That's amazing.
I wouldn't go back to being sighted.
the more obstacles you'll face,
and sighted people from all backgrounds
better, more clearly, with less fear,
the immense capacity within us all
through any form of darkness,
a spectacular standing ovation at TED.
your inner world that you construct.
that you as a blind person don't have,
behind me as it does in front of me.
three-dimensional geometry.
become an instructor,
after a few months
everything going on throughout the house:
people in the bathroom,
like having x-ray vision.
that you're in right now?
When people make a sound,
when they take a drink or blow their nose
that every single person makes.
of the audience around the stage,
of three-dimensional surface geometry
a spectacular job
in a different way.
DK: Thank you.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Daniel Kish - Perceptual navigation specialistDaniel Kish expands the perceptual toolbox of both blind and sighted humans by teaching echolocation -- the ability to observe our surroundings via sound.
Why you should listen
When he was 13 months old, Daniel Kish lost both eyes to retinal cancer. Driven by fearless curiosity, he taught himself to navigate by clicking his tongue and listening for echoes -- a method science calls echolocation, and that Kish calls FlashSonar.
In 2000, Kish founded World Access for the Blind as a platform to teach FlashSonar, along with other methods that the blind can use to “see” and that the sighted can use to expand their awareness. Kish and many researchers believe that echolocation produces images similar to sight, and allows the visually impaired to transcend the limited expectations of society.
Daniel Kish | Speaker | TED.com