82,319 research outputs found
Generalized Triangular Decomposition in Transform Coding
A general family of optimal transform coders (TCs) is introduced here based on the generalized triangular decomposition (GTD) developed by Jiang This family includes the Karhunen-Loeve transform (KLT) and the generalized version of the prediction-based lower triangular transform (PLT) introduced by Phoong and Lin as special cases. The coding gain of the entire family, with optimal bit allocation, is equal to that of the KLT and the PLT. Even though the original PLT introduced by Phoong is not applicable for vectors that are not blocked versions of scalar wide sense stationary processes, the GTD-based family includes members that are natural extensions of the PLT, and therefore also enjoy the so-called MINLAB structure of the PLT, which has the unit noise-gain property. Other special cases of the GTD-TC are the geometric mean decomposition (GMD) and the bidiagonal decomposition (BID) transform coders. The GMD-TC in particular has the property that the optimum bit allocation is a uniform allocation; this is because all its transform domain coefficients have the same variance, implying thereby that the dynamic ranges of the coefficients to be quantized are identical
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On designing H∞ filters with circular pole and error variance constraints
Copyright [2003] IEEE. This material is posted here with permission of the IEEE. Such permission of the IEEE does not in any way imply IEEE endorsement of any of Brunel University's products or services. Internal or personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution must be obtained from the IEEE by writing to [email protected]. By choosing to view this document, you agree to all provisions of the copyright laws protecting it.In this paper, we deal with the problem of designing a H∞ filter for discrete-time systems subject to error variance and circular pole constraints. Specifically, we aim to design a filter such that the H∞ norm of the filtering error-transfer function is not less than a given upper bound, while the poles of the filtering matrix are assigned within a prespecified circular region, and the steady-state error variance for each state is not more than the individual prespecified value. The filter design problem is formulated as an auxiliary matrix assignment problem. Both the existence condition and the explicit expression of the desired filters are then derived by using an algebraic matrix inequality approach. The proposed design algorithm is illustrated by a numerical example
Generic Feasibility of Perfect Reconstruction with Short FIR Filters in Multi-channel Systems
We study the feasibility of short finite impulse response (FIR) synthesis for
perfect reconstruction (PR) in generic FIR filter banks. Among all PR synthesis
banks, we focus on the one with the minimum filter length. For filter banks
with oversampling factors of at least two, we provide prescriptions for the
shortest filter length of the synthesis bank that would guarantee PR almost
surely. The prescribed length is as short or shorter than the analysis filters
and has an approximate inverse relationship with the oversampling factor. Our
results are in form of necessary and sufficient statements that hold
generically, hence only fail for elaborately-designed nongeneric examples. We
provide extensive numerical verification of the theoretical results and
demonstrate that the gap between the derived filter length prescriptions and
the true minimum is small. The results have potential applications in synthesis
FB design problems, where the analysis bank is given, and for analysis of
fundamental limitations in blind signals reconstruction from data collected by
unknown subsampled multi-channel systems.Comment: Manuscript submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
Design and Implementation of an RNS-based 2D DWT Processor
No abstract availabl
Cyclic LTI systems in digital signal processing
Cyclic signal processing refers to situations where all the time indices are interpreted modulo some integer L. In such cases, the frequency domain is defined as a uniform discrete grid (as in L-point DFT). This offers more freedom in theoretical as well as design aspects. While circular convolution has been the centerpiece of many algorithms in signal processing for decades, such freedom, especially from the viewpoint of linear system theory, has not been studied in the past. In this paper, we introduce the fundamentals of cyclic multirate systems and filter banks, presenting several important differences between the cyclic and noncyclic cases. Cyclic systems with allpass and paraunitary properties are studied. The paraunitary interpolation problem is introduced, and it is shown that the interpolation does not always succeed. State-space descriptions of cyclic LTI systems are introduced, and the notions of reachability and observability of state equations are revisited. It is shown that unlike in traditional linear systems, these two notions are not related to the system minimality in a simple way. Throughout the paper, a number of open problems are pointed out from the perspective of the signal processor as well as the system theorist
Throughput analysis for a high-performance FPGA-accelerated real-time search application
We propose an FPGA design for the relevancy computation part of a high-throughput real-time search application. The application matches terms in a stream of documents against a static profile, held in off-chip memory. We present a mathematical analysis of the throughput of the application and apply it to the problem of scaling the Bloom filter used to discard nonmatches
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