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Detection Theory Chapter 12 Model Change Detection

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1 Detection Theory Chapter 12 Model Change Detection
Xiang Gao January 18, 2011

2 Examples of Model Change Detection
So far, we have studied detection of a signal in noise Model change detection Detection of system parameters change in time or space In this chapter we study detection of DC level change Noise variance change Examples in wireless communication Synchronization Detection of user presence Summarize the chapters we studied before

3 Outline Basic problem Extension to basic problem Multiple change times
Known DC level jump at known time Known variance jump at known time NP approach Extension to basic problem Unknown DC levels and known jump time Known DC levels and unknown jump time GLRT approach Multiple change times Dynamic programming for parameters estimation to reduce the computation Problems

4 (No Unknown Parameters)
Basic Problem (No Unknown Parameters)

5 Example 1: Known DC Level and Jump Time
Jump time and DC levels before and after jump are known A = 4 A = 1

6 Example 1: Known DC Level and Jump Time
Neyman-Pearson (NP) test Detect the jump and control the amount of false alarm Data PDF NP detector decides H1

7 Example 1: Known DC Level and Jump Time
Test statistic Average deviation of data change over assumed jump interval Data before jump are irrelavant Detection performance Tradeoffs in parameter change detection Delay time in detecting a jump

8 Example 2: Known Variance Jump at Known Time
Energy detector? Variance = 1 Variance = 4 Detect power change in noise, ex. SNR, guess energy detector

9 Example 2: Known Variance Jump at Known Time
NP detecor decides H1 Detection performance, UMP

10 Example 2: Known Variance Jump at Known Time
Finally, we can get test statistic It is an energy detector Same as detecting a Gaussian random signal in WGN (Chapter 5) Chapter 5, UMP

11 Extensions to Basic Problem
(Unknown Parameters Present)

12 Example 3: Unknown DC Levels, Known Jump Time
Assume n0 is known but DC levels before the jump A1 and after the jump A2 are unknown GLRT detector decides H1 if Average over all the data samples Average over data samples before jump Average over data samples after jump

13 Example 3: Unknown DC Levels, Known Jump Time
After some simplification, we decide H1 if PDF of test statistic Explain lamda, best performance occurs when n0 is at mid-point of data record, different from example 1

14 Example 4: Known DC Levels, Unknown Jump Time
Now the case is: A0 and ΔA are known, but n0 is unknown This is classical synchronization problem GLRT detector decides H1 if Same as Example 1 Test statistic is maximized over all possible values of n0

15 Final Case: Unknown DC Levels, Unknown Jump Time
DC levels as well as jump time are unknown GLRT decides H1 if MLE of DC levels:

16 Multiple Change Times

17 Multiple Change Times Parameter’s value changes more than once in data record For example: DC levels change multiple times in WGN A = 6 A = 4 A = 2 A = 1

18 Multiple Change Times No unknown paramters Unknown parameters
Same as Example 1 Unknown parameters DC levels unknown, change times known Same as Example 3 Change times unknown Computational explosion with the number of change times

19 Example 5: Unknown DC Levels, Unknown Jump Times
We have signal embedded in WGN GLRT can be used if we can determine the MLE of change times Focus on estimation of DC levels and change times Joint MLE of To minimize

20 Example 5: Unknown DC Levels, Unknwon Jump Times
Dynamic programming Not all combinations of n0, n1, n2 need to be evaluated Reduce computational complexity Effectively eliminate many possible ”paths” Recursion for the minimum

21 Problems 12.1 12.2 12.4 12.6 12.11


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