• DocumentCode
    3146331
  • Title

    A flexible approach and VLSI architecture for computing discrete time-frequency distribution

  • Author

    Le, Thuyen ; Dombek, T. ; Becker, J. ; Glesner, M.

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. of Microelectron. Syst., Darmstadt Univ. of Technol., Germany
  • fYear
    1998
  • fDate
    8-10 Oct 1998
  • Firstpage
    182
  • Lastpage
    191
  • Abstract
    Time-frequency distribution (TFD) based on Cohen´s class has significant potential for the analysis of a number of non-stationary signals, including speech, biomedical signals and machine vibration. The implementation of discrete signals has led to the definition of many different discrete TFD. The spectral decomposition of the kernel allows the computation of the generalized discrete-time TFD (GDTFD) as a weighted sum of spectrograms with orthonormal windows. The partial sum offers the user a vehicle to perform trade-off between exactness and computational requirement. We extend this idea by showing that the combination of incremental refinement and approximating structure along with the spectral decomposition-based GDTFD provides more flexibility and a variety of trade-offs between approximation quality and computational cost. The paper discusses aspects of a suitable VLSI architecture featuring modular structure, local connections and reconfigurable logic module for implementation. The result serves as a basis to design a programmable core for computing GDTFD within an integrated mechatronic system targeting fault detection
  • Keywords
    VLSI; digital signal processing chips; mechatronics; reconfigurable architectures; spectral analysis; time-frequency analysis; Cohen´s class; VLSI architecture; approximating structure; computational cost; discrete time-frequency distribution; fault detection; generalized discrete-time TFD; incremental refinement; mechatronic system; non-stationary signal analysis; orthonormal windows; programmable core; reconfigurable architecture; reconfigurable logic module; spectral decomposition; spectrograms; Biomedical computing; Computational efficiency; Computer architecture; Kernel; Signal analysis; Spectrogram; Speech analysis; Time frequency analysis; Vehicles; Very large scale integration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Signal Processing Systems, 1998. SIPS 98. 1998 IEEE Workshop on
  • Conference_Location
    Cambridge, MA
  • ISSN
    1520-6130
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-4997-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SIPS.1998.715781
  • Filename
    715781