• DocumentCode
    1442345
  • Title

    Alignment of noisy signals

  • Author

    Coakley, Kevin J. ; Hale, Paul

  • Author_Institution
    Statistical Eng. Div., Nat. Inst. of Stand. & Technol., Boulder, CO, USA
  • Volume
    50
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    141
  • Lastpage
    149
  • Abstract
    We study the relative performance of various methods for aligning noisy one-dimensional signals. No knowledge of the shape of the misaligned signals is assumed. We simulate signals corrupted by both additive noise and timing jitter noise which are similar in complexity to nose-to-nose oscilloscope calibration signals collected at NIST. In one method, we estimate the relative shift of two signals as the difference of their estimated centroids, We present a new adaptive algorithm for centroid estimation. We also estimate relative shifts from three different implementations of cross-correlation analysis. In a complete implementation, for N signals, relative shifts are estimated from all N(N-1)/2 distinct pairs of signals. In a naive implementation, relative shifts are estimated from just (N-1) pairs of signals. In an iterative adaptive implementation, we estimate the relative shift of each signal with respect to a template signal which, at each iteration, is equated to the signal average of the aligned signals. In simulation experiments, 100 misaligned signals are generated. For all noise levels, the complete cross-correlation method yields the most accurate estimates of the relative shifts. The relative performance of the other methods depends on the noise levels
  • Keywords
    adaptive estimation; adaptive signal processing; correlation methods; high-speed techniques; interference (signal); iterative methods; least squares approximations; signal sampling; timing jitter; adaptive algorithm; adaptive estimation; additive noise; centroid estimation; cross-correlation analysis; high-speed sampling; impulse response functions; iterative adaptive implementation; least-squares estimation; misaligned signals; noise levels; noisy one-dimensional signal alignment; nose-to-nose oscilloscope calibration signals; relative performance; relative signal shift; signal simulation; simulation experiments; template signal; timing jitter noise; Adaptive algorithm; Additive noise; Calibration; NIST; Noise level; Noise shaping; Oscilloscopes; Shape; Signal generators; Timing jitter;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Instrumentation and Measurement, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9456
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/19.903892
  • Filename
    903892