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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

[en] DIRECTION FINDING TECHNIQUES BASED ON COMPRESSIVE SENSING AND MULTIPLE CANDIDATES / [pt] TÉCNICAS DE ESTIMAÇÃO DE DIREÇÃO BASEADAS EM SENSORIAMENTO COMPRESSIVO E MÚLTIPLOS CANDIDATOS

YUNEISY ESTHELA GARCIA GUZMAN 14 November 2018 (has links)
[pt] A estimação de direção de chegada (DoA) é uma importante área de processamento de arranjos de sensores que é encontrada em uma ampla gama de aplicações de engenharia. Este fato, juntamente com o desenvolvimento da área de Compressed Sensing (CS) nos últimos anos, são a principal motivação desta dissertação. Nesta dissertação, é apresentada uma formulação do problema de estimação de direção de chegada como um problema de representação esparsa da sinal e vários algoritmos de recuperação esparsa são derivados e investigados para resolver o problema atual. Os algoritmos propostos são baseados na incorporação da informação prévia sobre o sinal esparso no processo de estimativa. Na primeira parte, nos concentramos no desenvolvimento de dois algoritmos Bayesianos , que se baseiam principalmente no algoritmo iterative hard thresholding (IHT). Devido ao desempenho inferior dos algoritmos convencionais de estimação de chegada em cenários com fontes correlacionadas, nós prestamos atenção especial ao desempenho dos algoritmos propostos nesta condição. Na segunda parte, o problema de otimização baseados na minimização da norma l1 é apresentado e um algoritmo bayesiano é proposto para resolver o problema chamado basis pursuit denoising (BPDN). Os resultados da simulação mostram que os estimadores Bayesianos superam os estimadores não Bayesianos e que a incorporação do conhecimento prévio da distribuição do sinal melhorou substancialmente o desempenho dos algoritmos. / [en] Direction of arrival (DoA) estimation is a key area of sensor array processing which is encountered in a broad range of important engineering applications. This fact together with the development of the Compressed Sensing (CS) area in the last years are the principal motivation of this thesis. In this dissertation, a formulation of the source localization problem as a sparse signal representation problem is presented and several sparse recovery algorithms are derived and investigated for solving the current problem. The proposed algorithms are based on the incorporation of the prior information about the sparse signal in the estimation process. In the first part, we focus on the development of two Bayesian greedy algorithms which are principally based on the iterative hard thresholding (IHT) algorithm. Due to the inferior performance of the conventional DoA estimation algorithm in scenarios with correlated sources, we pay special attention to the performance of the proposed algorithms under this condition. In the second part, the optimization problem using a l1 penalty is introduced and a Bayesian algorithm for solving the basis pursuit denoising problem is presented. Simulation results shows that Bayesian estimators which take into account the prior knowledge of the signal distribution outperform and improve substantially the performance of the non-Bayesian estimators.
2

Distributed sparse signal recovery in networked systems

Han, Puxiao 01 January 2016 (has links)
In this dissertation, two classes of distributed algorithms are developed for sparse signal recovery in large sensor networks. All the proposed approaches consist of local computation (LC) and global computation (GC) steps carried out by a group of distributed local sensors, and do not require the local sensors to know the global sensing matrix. These algorithms are based on the original approximate message passing (AMP) and iterative hard thresholding (IHT) algorithms in the area of compressed sensing (CS), also known as sparse signal recovery. For distributed AMP (DiAMP), we develop a communication-efficient algorithm GCAMP. Numerical results demonstrate that it outperforms the modified thresholding algorithm (MTA), another popular GC algorithm for Top-K query from distributed large databases. For distributed IHT (DIHT), there is a step size $\mu$ which depends on the $\ell_2$ norm of the global sensing matrix A. The exact computation of $\|A\|_2$ is non-separable. We propose a new method, based on the random matrix theory (RMT), to give a very tight statistical upper bound of $\|A\|_2$, and the calculation of that upper bound is separable without any communication cost. In the GC step of DIHT, we develop another algorithm named GC.K, which is also communication-efficient and outperforms MTA. Then, by adjusting the metric of communication cost, which enables transmission of quantized data, and taking advantage of the correlation of data in adjacent iterations, we develop quantized adaptive GCAMP (Q-A-GCAMP) and quantized adaptive GC.K (Q-A-GC.K) algorithms, leading to a significant improvement on communication savings. Furthermore, we prove that state evolution (SE), a fundamental property of AMP that in high dimensionality limit, the output data are asymptotically Gaussian regardless of the distribution of input data, also holds for DiAMP. In addition, compared with the most recent theoretical results that SE holds for sensing matrices with independent subgaussian entries, we prove that the universality of SE can be extended to far more general sensing matrices. These two theoretical results provide strong guarantee of AMP's performance, and greatly broaden its potential applications.
3

Estimation de modèles tensoriels structurés et récupération de tenseurs de rang faible / Estimation of structured tensor models and recovery of low-rank tensors

Goulart, José Henrique De Morais 15 December 2016 (has links)
Dans la première partie de cette thèse, on formule deux méthodes pour le calcul d'une décomposition polyadique canonique avec facteurs matriciels linéairement structurés (tels que des facteurs de Toeplitz ou en bande): un algorithme de moindres carrés alternés contraint (CALS) et une solution algébrique dans le cas où tous les facteurs sont circulants. Des versions exacte et approchée de la première méthode sont étudiées. La deuxième méthode fait appel à la transformée de Fourier multidimensionnelle du tenseur considéré, ce qui conduit à la résolution d'un système d'équations monomiales homogènes. Nos simulations montrent que la combinaison de ces approches fournit un estimateur statistiquement efficace, ce qui reste vrai pour d'autres combinaisons de CALS dans des scénarios impliquant des facteurs non-circulants. La seconde partie de la thèse porte sur la récupération de tenseurs de rang faible et, en particulier, sur le problème de reconstruction tensorielle (TC). On propose un algorithme efficace, noté SeMPIHT, qui emploie des projections séquentiellement optimales par mode comme opérateur de seuillage dur. Une borne de performance est dérivée sous des conditions d'isométrie restreinte habituelles, ce qui fournit des bornes d'échantillonnage sous-optimales. Cependant, nos simulations suggèrent que SeMPIHT obéit à des bornes optimales pour des mesures Gaussiennes. Des heuristiques de sélection du pas et d'augmentation graduelle du rang sont aussi élaborées dans le but d'améliorer sa performance. On propose aussi un schéma d'imputation pour TC basé sur un seuillage doux du coeur du modèle de Tucker et son utilité est illustrée avec des données réelles de trafic routier / In the first part of this thesis, we formulate two methods for computing a canonical polyadic decomposition having linearly structured matrix factors (such as, e.g., Toeplitz or banded factors): a general constrained alternating least squares (CALS) algorithm and an algebraic solution for the case where all factors are circulant. Exact and approximate versions of the former method are studied. The latter method relies on a multidimensional discrete-time Fourier transform of the target tensor, which leads to a system of homogeneous monomial equations whose resolution provides the desired circulant factors. Our simulations show that combining these approaches yields a statistically efficient estimator, which is also true for other combinations of CALS in scenarios involving non-circulant factors. The second part of the thesis concerns low-rank tensor recovery (LRTR) and, in particular, the tensor completion (TC) problem. We propose an efficient algorithm, called SeMPIHT, employing sequentially optimal modal projections as its hard thresholding operator. Then, a performance bound is derived under usual restricted isometry conditions, which however yield suboptimal sampling bounds. Yet, our simulations suggest SeMPIHT obeys optimal sampling bounds for Gaussian measurements. Step size selection and gradual rank increase heuristics are also elaborated in order to improve performance. We also devise an imputation scheme for TC based on soft thresholding of a Tucker model core and illustrate its utility in completing real-world road traffic data acquired by an intelligent transportation

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