They’re talking about determining the origin of a sound. They’re saying if a sound originates from anywhere on the line of the cone shape it becomes impossible to decipher where it originated accurately. Humans actually have decent vertical echolocation, but just like dogs do when they’re trying to vertically echolocate we can also just face the approximate sound origin and tilt our heads to improve echolocation accuracy because our brains use the difference in elevation between our left and right ears to pinpoint the sound’s location.
You have elevated me to the plane of understanding, thank you!
Fun fact since one of my ears doesn’t work I can’t echolocate :’)))
Have you considered giving it a raise? (ba dum tsss)
Cool explanation, but that’s not what echolocation means
If you need me I’ll be in the chamber of understanding.
I cannot hear you, I’m in the tetrahedron of silence
I’ll be in the angry dome
Someone help, I’m in the Parallelpiped of Pain
I ended up in the scutoid of despair
It refers to the ability to locate the source of a sound. It supposes that the localization is achieved only by the difference of the time of arrival of the sound to both ears. That’s why the curve is a hyperbola, which is the set of points which distances to the foci (ears) have the same difference, so you couldn’t differentiate which of all the points in the hyperbola is the actual source (confusion). But this is too simplistic, the auditory system is much more sophisticated and the source can be localized by other means.
It says THE CONE OF CONFUSION.
Can you hear it better at that volume?
It’s like a cone of shame but for when you have Aural sex and get hearing AIDS