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Numerical implementation of the Hilbert transformWang, Xiangling 27 September 2006
Many people have abnormal heartbeats from time to time. A Holter monitor is a device used to record the electrical impulses of the heart when people do ordinary activities. Holter monitoring systems that can record heart rate and rhythm when you feel chest pain or symptoms of an irregular heartbeat (called an arrhythmia) and automatically perform electrocardiogram (ECG) signal analysis are desirable.<p>The use of the Hilbert transform (HT) in the area of electrocardiogram analysis is investigated. A property of the Hilbert transform, i.e., to form the analytic signal, was used in this thesis. Subsequently pattern recognition can be used to analyse the ECG data and lossless compression techniques can be used to reduce the ECG data for storage.<p>The thesis discusses one part of the Holter Monitoring System, Input processing.<p>Four different approaches, including the Time-Domain approach, the Frequency-Domain approach, the Boche approach and the Remez filter approach for calculating the Hilbert transform of an ECG wave are discussed in this thesis. By comparing them from the running time and the ease of software and hardware implementations, an efficient approach (the Remez approach) for use in calculating the Hilbert transform to build a Holter Monitoring System is proposed. <p>Using the Parks-McClellan algorithm, the Remez approach was present, and a digital filter was developed to filter the data sequence. <p>Accurate determination of the QRS complex, in particular, accurate detection of the wave peak, is important in ECG analysis and is another task in this thesis. A program was developed to detect the wave peak in an ECG wave.<p>The whole algorithm is implemented using Alteras Nios SOPC (system on a program chip) Builder system development tool. The performance of the algorithm was tested using the standard ECG waveform records from the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia database. The results will be used in pattern recognition to judge whether the ECG wave is normal or abnormal.
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Numerical implementation of the Hilbert transformWang, Xiangling 27 September 2006 (has links)
Many people have abnormal heartbeats from time to time. A Holter monitor is a device used to record the electrical impulses of the heart when people do ordinary activities. Holter monitoring systems that can record heart rate and rhythm when you feel chest pain or symptoms of an irregular heartbeat (called an arrhythmia) and automatically perform electrocardiogram (ECG) signal analysis are desirable.<p>The use of the Hilbert transform (HT) in the area of electrocardiogram analysis is investigated. A property of the Hilbert transform, i.e., to form the analytic signal, was used in this thesis. Subsequently pattern recognition can be used to analyse the ECG data and lossless compression techniques can be used to reduce the ECG data for storage.<p>The thesis discusses one part of the Holter Monitoring System, Input processing.<p>Four different approaches, including the Time-Domain approach, the Frequency-Domain approach, the Boche approach and the Remez filter approach for calculating the Hilbert transform of an ECG wave are discussed in this thesis. By comparing them from the running time and the ease of software and hardware implementations, an efficient approach (the Remez approach) for use in calculating the Hilbert transform to build a Holter Monitoring System is proposed. <p>Using the Parks-McClellan algorithm, the Remez approach was present, and a digital filter was developed to filter the data sequence. <p>Accurate determination of the QRS complex, in particular, accurate detection of the wave peak, is important in ECG analysis and is another task in this thesis. A program was developed to detect the wave peak in an ECG wave.<p>The whole algorithm is implemented using Alteras Nios SOPC (system on a program chip) Builder system development tool. The performance of the algorithm was tested using the standard ECG waveform records from the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia database. The results will be used in pattern recognition to judge whether the ECG wave is normal or abnormal.
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A Numerical Method to Solve the Divergence Issue of Microwave Circuit Model ExtractionChan, Yu-Lin 08 August 2012 (has links)
With the development of consumer electronics, the circuitry structure become more complex, For this reason, it might cause numerical errors to be cumulated in the simulation using the numerical electromagnetic algorithm, and result in simulated divergence or error. The two reasons of numerical error are passivity and causality, which priginate from the defect in the numerical calculation. In this thesis, for this problem, investigate the numerical compensation method for passivity, The occurrence of passive will make the frequency point of power is negative, this will makes the system divergence, Improve this problem, passivity verification and enforcement by eigenvalue in the Y-parameter, in the S-parameter by the singular value, causality conditions must be match with the imaginary part and the real part relationship, such as the Hilbert transform or the Kramer-Kronig relation, can be used to make causal verification and enforcement.
Through some numerical methods, used simulation software such as: HFSS, ADS simulation of the microwave circuit model extraction, modified singular value, eigenvalue, and reached to reduce the numerical error, let it satisfy the convergence and avoid incorrect results, and minimize the impact of the initial data, does not change the characteristics of the original module, but also to solve the passive and the issue of causality.
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A CMOS image rejection mixer for cable-TV tuner using switched-capacitor Hilbert transformer /Wong, Wing Kei. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 78-79). Also available in electronic version. Access restricted to campus users.
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Perturbations of selfadjoint operators with discrete spectrumAdduci, James 19 October 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Topics in Multi dimensional Signal DemodulationLarkin, Kieran Gerard January 2001 (has links)
Problems in the demodulation of one, two, and three-dimensional signals are investigated. In one-dimensional linear systems the analytic signal and the Hilbert transform are central to the understanding of both modulation and demodulation. However, it is shown that an efficient nonlinear algorithm exists which is not explicable purely in terms of an approximation to the Hilbert transform. The algorithm is applied to the problem of finding the envelope peak of a white light interferogram. The accuracy of peak location is then shown to compare favourably with conventional, but less efficient, techniques. In two dimensions (2-D) the intensity of a wavefield yields to a phase demodulation technique equivalent to direct phase retrieval. The special symmetry of a Helmholtz wavefield allows a unique inversion of an autocorrelation. More generally, a 2-D (non-Helmholtz) fringe pattern can be demodulated by an isotropic 2-D extension of the Hilbert transform that uses a spiral phase signum function. The range of validity of the new transform is established using the asymptotic method of stationary phase. Simulations of the algorithm confirm that deviations from the ideal occur where the fringe pattern curvature is larger than the fringe frequency. A new self-calibrating algorithm for arbitrary sequences of phase-shifted interferograms is developed using the aforementioned spiral phase transform. The algorithm is shown to work even with discontinuous fringe patterns, which are known to seriously hamper other methods. Initial simulations of the algorithm indicate an accuracy of 5 milliradians is achievable. Previously undocumented connections between the demodulation techniques are uncovered and discussed.
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Topics in Multi dimensional Signal DemodulationLarkin, Kieran Gerard January 2001 (has links)
Problems in the demodulation of one, two, and three-dimensional signals are investigated. In one-dimensional linear systems the analytic signal and the Hilbert transform are central to the understanding of both modulation and demodulation. However, it is shown that an efficient nonlinear algorithm exists which is not explicable purely in terms of an approximation to the Hilbert transform. The algorithm is applied to the problem of finding the envelope peak of a white light interferogram. The accuracy of peak location is then shown to compare favourably with conventional, but less efficient, techniques. In two dimensions (2-D) the intensity of a wavefield yields to a phase demodulation technique equivalent to direct phase retrieval. The special symmetry of a Helmholtz wavefield allows a unique inversion of an autocorrelation. More generally, a 2-D (non-Helmholtz) fringe pattern can be demodulated by an isotropic 2-D extension of the Hilbert transform that uses a spiral phase signum function. The range of validity of the new transform is established using the asymptotic method of stationary phase. Simulations of the algorithm confirm that deviations from the ideal occur where the fringe pattern curvature is larger than the fringe frequency. A new self-calibrating algorithm for arbitrary sequences of phase-shifted interferograms is developed using the aforementioned spiral phase transform. The algorithm is shown to work even with discontinuous fringe patterns, which are known to seriously hamper other methods. Initial simulations of the algorithm indicate an accuracy of 5 milliradians is achievable. Previously undocumented connections between the demodulation techniques are uncovered and discussed.
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Comparison of Hilbert Transform and Derivative Methods for Converting ECG Data Into Cardioid Plots to Detect Heart AbnormalitiesGoldie, Robert George 01 June 2021 (has links) (PDF)
Electrocardiogram (ECG) time-domain signals contain important information about the heart. Several techniques have been proposed for creating a two-dimensional visualization of an ECG, called a Cardioid, that can be used to detect heart abnormalities with computer algorithms. The derivative method is the prevailing technique, which is popular for its low complexity, but it can introduce distortion into the Cardioid plot without additional signal processing. The Hilbert transform is an alternative method which has unity gain and phase shifts the ECG signal by 90 degrees to create the Cardioid plot. However, the Hilbert transform is seldom used and has historically been implemented with a computationally expensive process. In this thesis we show a low-complexity method for implementing the Hilbert transform as a finite impulse response (FIR) filter. We compare the fundamental differences between Cardioid plots generated with the derivative and Hilbert transform methods and demonstrate the feature-preserving nature of the Hilbert transform method. Finally, we analyze the RMS values of the transformed signals to show how the Hilbert transform method can create near 1:1 aspect ratio Cardioid plots with very little distortion for any patient data.
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The Hilbert TransformMcGovern, James Denis 04 1900 (has links)
Abstract Not Provided. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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REAL-TIME HILBERT TRANSFORM AND AUTOCORRELATION FOR DIGITAL WIDEBAND COMMUNICATION APPLICATIONSSrinivasa Murthy, Dilip 20 November 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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