27 research outputs found

    Low Complexity Implementation of Daubechies Wavelets for Medical Imaging Applications

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    Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) II

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    This Edited Volume Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) II is a collection of reviewed and relevant research chapters, offering a comprehensive overview of recent developments in the field of Computer and Information Science. The book comprises single chapters authored by various researchers and edited by an expert active in the Computer and Information Science research area. All chapters are complete in itself but united under a common research study topic. This publication aims at providing a thorough overview of the latest research efforts by international authors on Computer and Information Science, and open new possible research paths for further novel developments

    Hardware implementation of daubechies wavelet transforms using folded AIQ mapping

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    The Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) is a popular tool in the field of image and video compression applications. Because of its multi-resolution representation capability, the DWT has been used effectively in applications such as transient signal analysis, computer vision, texture analysis, cell detection, and image compression. Daubechies wavelets are one of the popular transforms in the wavelet family. Daubechies filters provide excellent spatial and spectral locality-properties which make them useful in image compression. In this thesis, we present an efficient implementation of a shared hardware core to compute two 8-point Daubechies wavelet transforms. The architecture is based on a new two-level folded mapping technique, an improved version of the Algebraic Integer Quantization (AIQ). The scheme is developed on the factorization and decomposition of the transform coefficients that exploits the symmetrical and wrapping structure of the matrices. The proposed architecture is parallel, pipelined, and multiplexed. Compared to existing designs, the proposed scheme reduces significantly the hardware cost, critical path delay and power consumption with a higher throughput rate. Later, we have briefly presented a new mapping scheme to error-freely compute the Daubechies-8 tap wavelet transform, which is the next transform of Daubechies-6 in the Daubechies wavelet series. The multidimensional technique maps the irrational transformation basis coefficients with integers and results in considerable reduction in hardware and power consumption, and significant improvement in image reconstruction quality

    Discrete Wavelet Transforms

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    The discrete wavelet transform (DWT) algorithms have a firm position in processing of signals in several areas of research and industry. As DWT provides both octave-scale frequency and spatial timing of the analyzed signal, it is constantly used to solve and treat more and more advanced problems. The present book: Discrete Wavelet Transforms: Algorithms and Applications reviews the recent progress in discrete wavelet transform algorithms and applications. The book covers a wide range of methods (e.g. lifting, shift invariance, multi-scale analysis) for constructing DWTs. The book chapters are organized into four major parts. Part I describes the progress in hardware implementations of the DWT algorithms. Applications include multitone modulation for ADSL and equalization techniques, a scalable architecture for FPGA-implementation, lifting based algorithm for VLSI implementation, comparison between DWT and FFT based OFDM and modified SPIHT codec. Part II addresses image processing algorithms such as multiresolution approach for edge detection, low bit rate image compression, low complexity implementation of CQF wavelets and compression of multi-component images. Part III focuses watermaking DWT algorithms. Finally, Part IV describes shift invariant DWTs, DC lossless property, DWT based analysis and estimation of colored noise and an application of the wavelet Galerkin method. The chapters of the present book consist of both tutorial and highly advanced material. Therefore, the book is intended to be a reference text for graduate students and researchers to obtain state-of-the-art knowledge on specific applications

    Loop Transformations for the Optimized Generation of Reconfigurable Hardware

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    Current high-level design environments offer little support to implement data-intensive applications on heterogeneous-memory systems; they rather focus on parallelism. This thesis addresses the memory hierarchy problem to high-level transformations of loop structures. The composition of long transformation sequences by combining shorter subsequences is studied together with the influence of the order of applying transformation steps. Several methods are presented to estimate bounds on Ehrhart quasi-polynomials, which can be used to statically evaluate program properties, such as memory usage. Since loop transformations not only influence the data access pattern but also the control complexity we present a hardware loop controller architecture which supports hardware generation from the polyhedral representation used for loop transformations. The techniques are demonstrated by the semi-automatic generation of an FPGA implementation of an inverse discrete wavelet transform

    A Pipeline VLSI Architecture for High-Speed Computation of the 1-D Discrete Wavelet Transform

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    In this paper, a scheme for the design of a high-speed pipeline VLSI architecture for the computation of the 1-D discrete wavelet transform (DWT) is proposed. The main focus of the scheme is on reducing the number and period of clock cycles for the DWT computation with little or no overhead on the hardware resources by maximizing the inter- and intrastage parallelisms of the pipeline. The interstage parallelism is enhanced by optimally mapping the computational load associated with the various DWT decomposition levels to the stages of the pipeline and by synchronizing their operations. The intrastage parallelism is enhanced by decomposing the filtering operation equally into two subtasks that can be performed independently in parallel and by optimally organizing the bitwise operations for performing each subtask so that the delay of the critical data path from a partial-product bit to a bit of the output sample for the filtering operation is minimized. It is shown that an architecture designed based on the proposed scheme requires a smaller number of clock cycles compared to that of the architectures employing comparable hardware resources. In fact, the requirement on the hardware resources of the architecture designed by using the proposed scheme also gets improved due to a smaller number of registers that need to be employed. Based on the proposed scheme, a specific example of designing an architecture for the DWT computation is considered. In order to assess the feasibility and the efficiency of the proposed scheme, the architecture thus designed is simulated and implemented on a field-programmable gate-array board. It is seen that the simulation and implementation results conform to the stated goals of the proposed scheme, thus making the scheme a viable approach for designing a practical and realizable architecture for real-time DWT computation

    Wavelet Theory

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    The wavelet is a powerful mathematical tool that plays an important role in science and technology. This book looks at some of the most creative and popular applications of wavelets including biomedical signal processing, image processing, communication signal processing, Internet of Things (IoT), acoustical signal processing, financial market data analysis, energy and power management, and COVID-19 pandemic measurements and calculations. The editor’s personal interest is the application of wavelet transform to identify time domain changes on signals and corresponding frequency components and in improving power amplifier behavior

    High-Speed Pipeline VLSI Architectures for Discrete Wavelet Transforms

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    The discrete wavelet transform (DWT) has been widely used in many fields, such as image compression, speech analysis and pattern recognition, because of its capability of decomposing a signal at multiple resolution levels. Due to the intensive computations involved with this transform, the design of efficient VLSI architectures for a fast computation of the transforms have become essential, especially for real-time applications and those requiring processing of high-speed data. The objective of this thesis is to develop a scheme for the design of hardware resource-efficient high-speed pipeline architectures for the computation of the DWT. The goal of high speed is achieved by maximizing the operating frequency and minimizing the number of clock cycles required for the DWT computation with little or no overhead on the hardware resources. In this thesis, an attempt is made to reach this goal by enhancing the inter-stage and intra-stage parallelisms through a systematic exploitation of the characteristics inherent in discrete wavelet transforms. In order to enhance the inter-stage parallelism, a study is undertaken for determining the number of pipeline stages required for the DWT computation so as to synchronize their operations and utilize their hardware resources efficiently. This is achieved by optimally distributing the computational load associated with the various resolution levels to an optimum number of stages of the pipeline. This study has determined that employment of two pipeline stages with the first one performing the task of the first resolution level and the second one that of all the other resolution levels of the 1-D DWT computation, and employment of three pipeline stages with the first and second ones performing the tasks of the first and second resolution levels and the third one performing that of the remaining resolution levels of the 2-D DWT computation, are the optimum choices for the development of 1-D and 2-D pipeline architectures, respectively. The enhancement of the intra-stage parallelism is based on two main ideas. The first idea, which stems from the fact that in each consecutive resolution level the input data are decimated by a factor of two along each dimension, is to decompose the filtering operation into subtasks that can be performed in parallel by operating on even- and odd-numbered samples along each dimension of the data. It is shown that each subtask, which is essentially a set of multiply-accumulate operations, can be performed by employing a MAC-cell network consisting of a two-dimensional array of bit-wise adders. The second idea in enhancing the intra-stage parallelism is to maximally extend the bit-wise addition operations of this network horizontally through a suitable arrangement of bit-wise adders so as to minimize the delay of its critical path. In order to validate the proposed scheme, design and implementation of two specific examples of pipeline architectures for the 1-D and 2-D DWT computations are considered. The simulation results show that the pipeline architectures designed using the proposed scheme are able to operate at high clock frequencies, and their performances, in terms of the processing speed and area-time product, are superior to those of the architectures designed based on other schemes and utilizing similar or higher amount of hardware resources. Finally, the two pipeline architectures designed using the proposed scheme are implemented in FPGA. The test results of the FPGA implementations validate the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed scheme for designing DWT pipeline architectures
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