Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Montana State University
Spring Semester 2004
LECTURE: Section 1 (CRN 32200), Mon., Wed., and Fri., 10:00-10:50AM, CobH 632
LAB: Section 2 (CRN 32201), Thursday 11:00-12:00PM, CobH 601 (LAB)
- Instructor
- Prof. Robert C. Maher
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Office: |
529 Cobleigh Hall (southwest corner of 5th floor)
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Phone: |
Office: 994-7759 Research Lab: 994-6575 (Faculty Court Unit 21) Home: 587-5925 (but please do not call me at home)
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Email: |
rob.maher@montana.edu
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Class Page: |
/rmaher/ee477
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Office hours: |
Monday: 11AM-noon, Thursday: 10-11AM, Friday: 11AM-noon, or by appointment. Drop-in questions at other times are always OK if my office door is open.
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- Textbooks and Materials
- 1. DSP First: A Multimedia Approach, McClellan, Schafer, and Yoder, Prentice-Hall, 1998. Please put your name in your textbook in case the book is misplaced.
- 2. The textbook contains a CDROM that contains labs 1-10 that we will be using in the course. It is expected that you will print out and read these labs before coming to the laboratory.
- 3. Two 1.44 MB 3.5 floppies (or zip disks) for the labs (One to store your programs & the other to turn in for programming assignments). Please put your name on the floppy disk or zip disk you turn in!
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- Class Objectives
- To produce graduates who understand how to analyze and manipulate digital signals and have the fundamental programming knowledge to do so.
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- Course Outcomes
- At the conclusion of EE 477, students will:
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- Describe the Sampling Theorem and how this relates to Aliasing and Folding.
- Determine if a system is a Linear Time-Invariant (LTI) System.
- Be able to take the Z-transform of a LTI system
- Determine the frequency response of FIR and IIR filters.
- Understand the relationship between poles, zeros, and stability.
- Determine the spectrum of a signal using the DFT, FFT, and spectrogram.
- Be able to design, analyze, and implement digital filters in Matlab.
- Be able to implement filters on a digital signal processor.
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- Class Outline (subject to change)
- Course introduction: Expectations, lab resources, protocol.
- Sinusoids, discrete-time signals, complex exponentials, phasors (2 weeks)
- Sampling (2 weeks)
- Discrete-time system properties (2 weeks)
- FIR filters, simple LTI systems (1 week)
- Frequency response (2 weeks)
- z-transforms (2 weeks)
- IIR filters (2 weeks)
- Discrete Fourier Transform and FFT (1 week)
- Practical topics (2 weeks)
Lab Schedule (subject to change)
1) Thu Jan 15 - Introduction to Matlab
2) Thu Jan 22 - Introduction to Complex Exponentials
3) Thu Jan 29 - Synthesis of Sinusoidal Signals
4) Thu Feb 5 - AM and FM Sinusoidal Signals
5) Thu Feb 12 - FIR Filtering of Sinusoidal Waveforms
6) Thu Feb 19 - Filtering Sampled Waveforms
7) Thu Feb 26 - Everyday Sinusoidal Signals
8) Thu Mar 4 - Filtering and Edge Detection of Images
9) Thu Mar 11 - Sampling and Zooming of Images
Thu Mar 18 - No Lab (Spring Break)
10) Thu Mar 25 - The z, n, and w Domains
11) Thu Apr 1 - Intro to VisualDSP
12) Thu Apr 8 - DSP Hardware - Synthesizing Waveforms
13) Thu Apr 15 - DSP Hardware - FIR Filters
14) Thu Apr 22 - DSP Hardware - IIR Filters
15) Thu Apr 29 - DSP Hardware - FFT
Course Grading:
Homework: |
15% |
→ Homework will be required periodically. Homework is due on the due date at the BEGINNING of class. No late homework will be accepted.
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Lab Reports: |
20% |
→ Lab reports are due no later than the BEGINNING of the next week's lab session, unless otherwise announced. No late lab reports will be accepted.
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Exam 1: |
20% |
→ Written in-class exam given late in February.
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Exam 2: |
20% |
→ Written in-class exam given early in April.
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Final Exam: |
25% |
→ The cumulative final exam is: TUESDAY, MAY 4, 2004 (8-9:50AM).
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100%
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A course grade of F will be given if the student does not attend both midterm exams and the final exam. Grade guarantee: course letter grades may be higher (but will not be lower) than indicated by the following scale:
A- = 90%
B- = 80%
C- = 70%
D = 60%
F = 59%
Policies
- Department policy requires that you receive a passing lab grade to pass this course.
- All students must have an electronic mail address listed with the MSU My Info system. Announcements and reminders for EE477 will be sent occasionally via email. Students will also need to get an MSU computer access account and printing privileges for the ECE Department computer labs.
- You are expected to keep a clean lab area and return items to their proper place. Equipment is expensive and is provided for your learning experience. Please conduct yourselves appropriately. Abusive behavior toward the lab equipment, other students, or the instructors, will result in summary dismissal from the course.
- You are responsible for all material covered in class and in the textbook reading assignments.
- You will work with a lab partner during the lab period, but your lab report must be prepared individually. Homework and exams also must be prepared individually. Submitting the work of others without clear attribution is dishonest and grounds for dismissal from the course.
- Late submissions of assignments (labs or homework) will not be accepted. Plan ahead and notify the instructor prior to justifiable absences, or if a bona fide emergency prevented you from attending class.
- Please note that many of the lab assignments depend upon earlier labs: even if get a zero score because you skip or do not turn in a lab assignment, you may still need to do it in order to complete subsequent lab assignments.