13,206 research outputs found
Frame Theory for Signal Processing in Psychoacoustics
This review chapter aims to strengthen the link between frame theory and
signal processing tasks in psychoacoustics. On the one side, the basic concepts
of frame theory are presented and some proofs are provided to explain those
concepts in some detail. The goal is to reveal to hearing scientists how this
mathematical theory could be relevant for their research. In particular, we
focus on frame theory in a filter bank approach, which is probably the most
relevant view-point for audio signal processing. On the other side, basic
psychoacoustic concepts are presented to stimulate mathematicians to apply
their knowledge in this field
Sampling and Reconstruction of Sparse Signals on Circulant Graphs - An Introduction to Graph-FRI
With the objective of employing graphs toward a more generalized theory of
signal processing, we present a novel sampling framework for (wavelet-)sparse
signals defined on circulant graphs which extends basic properties of Finite
Rate of Innovation (FRI) theory to the graph domain, and can be applied to
arbitrary graphs via suitable approximation schemes. At its core, the
introduced Graph-FRI-framework states that any K-sparse signal on the vertices
of a circulant graph can be perfectly reconstructed from its
dimensionality-reduced representation in the graph spectral domain, the Graph
Fourier Transform (GFT), of minimum size 2K. By leveraging the recently
developed theory of e-splines and e-spline wavelets on graphs, one can
decompose this graph spectral transformation into the multiresolution low-pass
filtering operation with a graph e-spline filter, and subsequent transformation
to the spectral graph domain; this allows to infer a distinct sampling pattern,
and, ultimately, the structure of an associated coarsened graph, which
preserves essential properties of the original, including circularity and,
where applicable, the graph generating set.Comment: To appear in Appl. Comput. Harmon. Anal. (2017
Wavelet Estimators in Nonparametric Regression: A Comparative Simulation Study
Wavelet analysis has been found to be a powerful tool for the nonparametric estimation of spatially-variable objects. We discuss in detail wavelet methods in nonparametric regression, where the data are modelled as observations of a signal contaminated with additive Gaussian noise, and provide an extensive review of the vast literature of wavelet shrinkage and wavelet thresholding estimators developed to denoise such data. These estimators arise from a wide range of classical and empirical Bayes methods treating either individual or blocks of wavelet coefficients. We compare various estimators in an extensive simulation study on a variety of sample sizes, test functions, signal-to-noise ratios and wavelet filters. Because there is no single criterion that can adequately summarise the behaviour of an estimator, we use various criteria to measure performance in finite sample situations. Insight into the performance of these estimators is obtained from graphical outputs and numerical tables. In order to provide some hints of how these estimators should be used to analyse real data sets, a detailed practical step-by-step illustration of a wavelet denoising analysis on electrical consumption is provided. Matlab codes are provided so that all figures and tables in this paper can be reproduced
Left-invariant evolutions of wavelet transforms on the Similitude Group
Enhancement of multiple-scale elongated structures in noisy image data is
relevant for many biomedical applications but commonly used PDE-based
enhancement techniques often fail at crossings in an image. To get an overview
of how an image is composed of local multiple-scale elongated structures we
construct a multiple scale orientation score, which is a continuous wavelet
transform on the similitude group, SIM(2). Our unitary transform maps the space
of images onto a reproducing kernel space defined on SIM(2), allowing us to
robustly relate Euclidean (and scaling) invariant operators on images to
left-invariant operators on the corresponding continuous wavelet transform.
Rather than often used wavelet (soft-)thresholding techniques, we employ the
group structure in the wavelet domain to arrive at left-invariant evolutions
and flows (diffusion), for contextual crossing preserving enhancement of
multiple scale elongated structures in noisy images. We present experiments
that display benefits of our work compared to recent PDE techniques acting
directly on the images and to our previous work on left-invariant diffusions on
orientation scores defined on Euclidean motion group.Comment: 40 page
Tomographic inversion using -norm regularization of wavelet coefficients
We propose the use of regularization in a wavelet basis for the
solution of linearized seismic tomography problems , allowing for the
possibility of sharp discontinuities superimposed on a smoothly varying
background. An iterative method is used to find a sparse solution that
contains no more fine-scale structure than is necessary to fit the data to
within its assigned errors.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures. Submitted to GJI July 2006. This preprint does
not use GJI style files (which gives wrong received/accepted dates).
Corrected typ
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