124 research outputs found
Structure and realization of pole-shared switched-current complex wavelet filter
A pole-shared switched-current complex wavelet filter structure with follow-the-leader feedback configuration is proposed for synthesizing the real and imaginary approximation functions with the same poles. The double-sampling fully-balanced SI bilinear integrator and current mirror are employed as the building cells. By sharing the implementation circuit for approximation poles of the real and the imaginary part, the proposed structure only has the same circuit complexity as that of real-valued wavelet filter, which is very suitable for small-size and low-power application. The complex Morlet wavelet is selected as an example to elaborate the design procedure. Simulation results confirm that the presented complex wavelet filter structure can generate the real and imaginary coefficients of complex wavelet transform accurately with simple synthesis method and explicit design formulas.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Design of Gm-C wavelet filter for on-line epileptic EEG detection
Copyright © 2019 The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication EngineersAnalog filter implementation of continuous wavelet transform is considered as a promising technique for on-line spike detection applied in wearable electroencephalogram system. This Letter proposes a novel method to construct analog wavelet base for analog wavelet filter design, in which the mathematical approximation model in frequency domain is built as an optimization problem and the genetic algorithm is used to find the global optimum resolution. Also, the Gm-C filter structure based on LC ladder simulation is employed to synthesize the obtained analog wavelet base. The Marr wavelet filter is designed as an example using SMIC 1V 0.35μm CMOS technology. Simulation results show that the proposed method can give a stable analog wavelet filter with higher approximation accuracy and excellent circuit performance, which is well suited for the design of low-frequency low-power spike detector.Peer reviewe
Realization of Analog Wavelet Filter using Hybrid Genetic Algorithm for On-line Epileptic Event Detection
© 2020 The Author(s). This open access work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. For more information, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.As the evolution of traditional electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring unit for epilepsy diagnosis, wearable ambulatory EEG (WAEEG) system transmits EEG data wirelessly, and can be made miniaturized, discrete and social acceptable. To prolong the battery lifetime, analog wavelet filter is used for epileptic event detection in WAEEG system to achieve on-line data reduction. For mapping continuous wavelet transform to analog filter implementation with low-power consumption and high approximation accuracy, this paper proposes a novel approximation method to construct the wavelet base in analog domain, in which the approximation process in frequency domain is considered as an optimization problem by building a mathematical model with only one term in the numerator. The hybrid genetic algorithm consisting of genetic algorithm and quasi-Newton method is employed to find the globally optimum solution, taking required stability into account. Experiment results show that the proposed method can give a stable analog wavelet base with simple structure and higher approximation accuracy compared with existing method, leading to a better spike detection accuracy. The fourth-order Marr wavelet filter is designed as an example using Gm-C filter structure based on LC ladder simulation, whose power consumption is only 33.4 pW at 2.1Hz. Simulation results show that the design method can be used to facilitate low power and small volume implementation of on-line epileptic event detector.Peer reviewe
Learning to Program with Natural Language
Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown remarkable performance in various
basic natural language tasks, which raises hope for achieving Artificial
General Intelligence. For completing the complex task, we still need a program
for the task first and then ask LLMs to follow the program to generate the
specific solution. We propose using natural language as a new programming
language to describe task procedures, making them easily understandable to both
humans and LLMs. ~The LLM is capable of directly generating natural language
programs, but these programs may still contain factual errors or incomplete
steps. Therefore, we further propose the Learning to Program (\text{LP}) method
to ask LLMs themselves to learn the natural language program based on the
training dataset of the complex task first and then use the learned program to
guide the inference. Our experiments on the reasoning tasks of five different
reasoning types (8 datasets) demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.
Further, our analysis experiment shows that the learned program can be directly
used to guide another LLM to improve its performance, which reveals a new
transfer learning paradigm.Comment: Work in progres
Quantum phases of SrCu2(BO3)2 from high-pressure thermodynamics
We report heat capacity measurements of SrCu(BO) under high
pressure along with simulations of relevant quantum spin models and map out the
phase diagram of the material. We find a first-order quantum phase
transition between the low-pressure quantum dimer paramagnet and a phase with
signatures of a plaquette-singlet state below T = K. At higher pressures,
we observe a transition into a previously unknown antiferromagnetic state below
K. Our findings can be explained within the two-dimensional
Shastry-Sutherland quantum spin model supplemented by weak inter-layer
couplings. The possibility to tune SrCu(BO) between the
plaquette-singlet and antiferromagnetic states opens opportunities for
experimental tests of quantum field theories and lattice models involving
fractionalized excitations, emergent symmetries, and gauge fluctuations.Comment: 6 pages + 8 pages supplemental informatio
Microbe-seq : high-throughput, single-microbe genomics with strain resolution, applied to a human gut microbiome
We present Microbe-seq , a high-throughput single-microbe method that yields strain-resolved genomes from complex microbial communities. We encapsulate individual microbes into droplets with microfluidics and liberate their DNA, which we amplify, tag with droplet-specific barcodes, and sequence. We use Microbe-seq to explore the human gut microbiome; we collect stool samples from a single individual, sequence over 20,000 microbes, and reconstruct nearly-complete genomes of almost 100 bacterial species, including several with multiple subspecies strains. We use these genomes to probe genomic signatures of microbial interactions: we reconstruct the horizontal gene transfer (HGT) network within the individual and observe far greater exchange within the same bacterial phylum than between different phyla. We probe bacteria-virus interactions; unexpectedly, we identify a significant in vivo association between crAssphage, an abundant bacteriophage, and a single strain of Bacteroides vulgatus. Microbe-seq contributes high-throughput culture-free capabilities to investigate genomic blueprints of complex microbial communities with single-microbe resolution
Deconfined quantum critical point lost in pressurized SrCu2(BO3)2
In the field of correlated electron materials, the relation between the
resonating spin singlet and antiferromagnetic states has long been an
attractive topic for understanding of the interesting macroscopic quantum
phenomena, such as the ones emerging from magnetic frustrated materials,
antiferromagnets and high-temperature superconductors. SrCu2(BO3)2 is a
well-known quantum magnet, and it is theoretically expected to be the candidate
of correlated electron material for clarifying the existence of a
pressure-induced deconfined quantum critical point (DQCP), featured by a
continuous quantum phase transition, between the plaquette-singlet (PS) valence
bond solid phase and the antiferromagnetic (AF) phase. However, the real nature
of the transition is yet to be identified experimentally due to the technical
challenge. Here we show the experimental results for the first time, through
the state-of-the-art high-pressure heat capacity measurement, that the PS-AF
phase transition of the pressurized SrCu2(BO3)2 at zero field is clearly a
first-order one. Our result clarifies the more than two-decade long debates
about this key issue, and resonates nicely with the recent quantum entanglement
understanding that the theoretically predicted DQCPs in representative lattice
models are actually a first-order transition. Intriguingly, we also find that
the transition temperatures of the PS and AF phase meet at the same
pressure-temperature point, which signifies a bi-critical point as those
observed in Fe-based superconductor and heavy-fermion compound, and constitutes
the first experimental discovery of the pressure-induced bi-critical point in
frustrated magnets. Our results provide fresh information for understanding the
evolution among different spin states of correlated electron materials under
pressure.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Switched-current filter structure for synthesizing arbitrary characteristics based on follow-the-leader feedback configuration
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Wenshan Zhao, Yigang He, and Yichuang Sun, ‘Switched-current filter structure for synthesizing arbitrary characteristics based on follow-the-leader feedback configuration’, Analog Integrated Circuits and Signal Processing, (2015), Vol. 82 (2): 479-486. The version of record is available online at doi: 10.1007/s10470-014-0477-8 © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2015Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
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