EE502: Digital Filters
Instructor
Prof. Robert C. Maher
Office: |
529 Cobleigh Hall (southwest corner of 5th floor) |
Phone: |
Office: 994-7759 |
Email: |
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Class Page: |
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Office hours: |
Tuesdays, 2-4PM. |
Textbook
"Discrete-Time Signal Processing, 2nd Edition" by Oppenheim, Schafer, and Buck, Prentice Hall, 1999 (ISBN: 0-13-754920-2).
Class Objectives
Students learn the essential advanced topics in digital signal processing that are necessary for successful graduate-level research. The course includes a review of the linear constant-coefficient system properties covered in an undergraduate DSP course, and then examines a variety of multirate filter structures, time-varying and adaptive systems, fast algorithms, and other topics relevant to the research areas of the students.
Class Outline (subject to change)
- Review of discrete-time signals and systems concepts; z-transform properties (3 weeks)
- Sampling, multirate processing, and oversampling (1 week)
- Frequency response and transform analysis (1 week)
- Filter structures and filter design (2 weeks)
- DFT and DCT (1 week)
- FFT and short-time Fourier transform (STFT) applications (2 weeks)
- Introduction to parametric and adaptive signal processing (2 weeks)
- Array processing (1 week)
- Introduction to data compression (1 week)
Grading
Homework: |
25% |
→ Homework will be required periodically (approximately 6 assignments) |
Exam #1 |
25% |
→ (February 26, 2003) Written exam given during class time (50 minutes) |
Exam #2 |
25% |
→ (April 4, 2003) Written exam given during class time (50 minutes) |
Final Project: |
25% |
→ A final written project will be assigned during the latter portion of the semester. |
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100% |
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Policies
- You are responsible for all material covered in class and in the textbook reading assignments.
- Homework, exams, and projects must be prepared individually. Submitting the work of others without clear attribution or collaboration without permission is dishonest and grounds for dismissal from the course.
- Late submissions of assignments 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.