Abstract
The increasing availability and use of advanced high-tech human-machine interfaces raise many interesting questions about what information should be presented to each sensory modality and how the information should be coded for a given modality. In this paper, attention is confined to the auditory component of the interface and, more specifically, to auditory localization. Both teleoperator systems and virtual-environment systems are considered, and attention is focused upon the opportunities and difficulties associated with the use of unnatural perceptual cues in these systems. Of central interest in this discussion is the use of such cues to improve resolution and thereby obtain systems with superlocalization capabilities.

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