DocumentCode
1016355
Title
Maximum likelihood estimation of signals in autoregressive noise
Author
Kay, Steven M. ; Nagesha, Venkatesh
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Rhode Island Univ., Kingston, RI, USA
Volume
42
Issue
1
fYear
1994
fDate
1/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
88
Lastpage
101
Abstract
Time series modeling as the sum of a deterministic signal and an autoregressive (AR) process is studied. Maximum likelihood estimation of the signal amplitudes and AR parameters is seen to result in a nonlinear estimation problem. However, it is shown that for a given class of signals, the use of a parameter transformation can reduce the problem to a linear least squares one. For unknown signal parameters, in addition to the signal amplitudes, the maximization can be reduced to one over the additional signal parameters. The general class of signals for which such parameter transformations are applicable, thereby reducing estimator complexity drastically, is derived. This class includes sinusoids as well as polynomials and polynomial-times-exponential signals. The ideas are based on the theory of invariant subspaces for linear operators. The results form a powerful modeling tool in signal plus noise problems and therefore find application in a large variety of statistical signal processing problems. The authors briefly discuss some applications such as spectral analysis, broadband/transient detection using line array data, and fundamental frequency estimation for periodic signals
Keywords
computational complexity; maximum likelihood estimation; parameter estimation; signal detection; signal processing; spectral analysis; stochastic processes; time series; autoregressive process; broadband/transient detection; deterministic signal; estimator complexity; fundamental frequency estimation; invariant subspaces; line array data; linear operators; maximization; maximum likelihood estimation; nonlinear estimation problem; parameter transformation; periodic signals; polynomial-times-exponential signals; polynomials; signal amplitudes; signal plus noise problems; sinusoids; spectral analysis; statistical signal processing; time series modeling; Autoregressive processes; Background noise; Colored noise; Contracts; Maximum likelihood estimation; Parameter estimation; Polynomials; Signal processing; Spectral analysis; White noise;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1053-587X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/78.258124
Filename
258124
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