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DCSP-13 Jianfeng Feng Department of Computer Science Warwick Univ., UK

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1 DCSP-13 Jianfeng Feng Department of Computer Science Warwick Univ., UK Jianfeng.feng@warwick.ac.uk http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~feng/dsp.html

2 Applications Power spectrum estimate Compression

3 clear all close all sampling_rate=100; %Hz omega=20; %signal frequecy Hz N=10000; %total number of samples for i=1:N x_sound(i)=cos(2*pi*omega*i/sampling_rate); %signal x(i)=cos(2*pi*omega*i/sampling_rate)+2*randn(1,1); %signal+noise axis(i)=sampling_rate*i/N; % for psd time(i)=i/sampling_rate; % for time trace end subplot(1,2,1) plot(time,x); %signal + noise, time trace xlabel('time (sec)'); ylabel('signal') subplot(1,2,2) plot(axis,abs(fft(x)).^2,'r'); % power of signal xlabel('Frequency') ylabel('Power') sound(x_sound, sampling_rate); %true signal sound

4 Singnal processing demo: transformation A few words on Matlab periodgram (fft) pwelch (overlapped windows)

5 Power spectrum for white noise Noise is a stochastic process x(t), for time t (discrete or continuous) Most noisy noise should have no memory, which impliese that E x(t)x(t+s) = 0 if s is not zero E x(t)x(t) = 1 or in another words E x(t)x(t+s) =  (s)

6 Therefore the psd of the white noise is flat: it has constant power for all frequencies, as confirmed in the previous matlabe example Different from all meaningful signals we encount

7 Spectrogram A spectrogram is an image that shows how the power spectrum of a signal varies with time.

8

9 Time Frequenc y

10 t=0:0.001:20; % 2 secs @ 1kHz sample rate y=chirp(t,100,1,200,'q'); % Start @ 100Hz, cross 200Hz at t=1sec spectrogram(y,128,120,128,1E3); % Display the spectrogram title('Quadratic Chirp: start at 100Hz and cross 200Hz at t=1sec'); sound(y)

11 Compression

12 Sampling and reconstruction The question we consider here is under what conditions we can completely reconstruct the original signal x(t) from its discretely sampled signal x(n).

13

14 The use in MP3 is designed to greatly reduce the amount of data required to represent the audio recording and still sound like a faithful reproduction of the original uncompressed audio for most listeners.

15 An MP3 file could result in a file that is about 1/11 th the size of the file created from the original audio source.

16 The compression works by reducing accuracy of certain parts of sound that are deemed beyond the auditory resolution ability of most people.

17 This method is commonly referred to as perceptual coding.

18 The compression works by reducing accuracy of certain parts of sound that are deemed beyond the auditory resolution ability of most people. This method is commonly referred to as perceptual coding. It internally provides a representation of sound within a short-term time/frequency analysis window, by using psychoacoustic models to discard or reduce precision of components less audible to human hearing, and recording the remaining information in an efficient manner.

19 This technique is often presented as relatively conceptually similar to the principles used by JPEG, an image compression format.


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