Wavelet transform

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In mathematics, a wavelet series is a representation of a square-integrable (real- or complex-valued) function by a certain orthonormal series generated by a wavelet. This article provides a formal, mathematical definition of an orthonormal wavelet and of the integral wavelet transform.[1][2][3][4][5]

An example of the 2D discrete wavelet transform that is used in JPEG2000

Definition

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A function   is called an orthonormal wavelet if it can be used to define a Hilbert basis, that is a complete orthonormal system, for the Hilbert space   of square integrable functions.

The Hilbert basis is constructed as the family of functions   by means of dyadic translations and dilations of  ,

 

for integers  .

If under the standard inner product on  ,

 

this family is orthonormal, it is an orthonormal system:

 

where   is the Kronecker delta.

Completeness is satisfied if every function   may be expanded in the basis as

 

with convergence of the series understood to be convergence in norm. Such a representation of f is known as a wavelet series. This implies that an orthonormal wavelet is self-dual.

The integral wavelet transform is the integral transform defined as

 

The wavelet coefficients   are then given by

 

Here,   is called the binary dilation or dyadic dilation, and   is the binary or dyadic position.

Principle

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The fundamental idea of wavelet transforms is that the transformation should allow only changes in time extension, but not shape, imposing a restriction on choosing suitable basis functions. Changes in the time extension are expected to conform to the corresponding analysis frequency of the basis function. Based on the uncertainty principle of signal processing,

 

where   represents time and   angular frequency ( , where   is ordinary frequency).

The higher the required resolution in time, the lower the resolution in frequency has to be. The larger the extension of the analysis windows is chosen, the larger is the value of  .

 

When   is large,

  1. Bad time resolution
  2. Good frequency resolution
  3. Low frequency, large scaling factor

When   is small

  1. Good time resolution
  2. Bad frequency resolution
  3. High frequency, small scaling factor

In other words, the basis function   can be regarded as an impulse response of a system with which the function   has been filtered. The transformed signal provides information about the time and the frequency. Therefore, wavelet-transformation contains information similar to the short-time-Fourier-transformation, but with additional special properties of the wavelets, which show up at the resolution in time at higher analysis frequencies of the basis function. The difference in time resolution at ascending frequencies for the Fourier transform and the wavelet transform is shown below. Note however, that the frequency resolution is decreasing for increasing frequencies while the temporal resolution increases. This consequence of the Fourier uncertainty principle is not correctly displayed in the Figure.

 

This shows that wavelet transformation is good in time resolution of high frequencies, while for slowly varying functions, the frequency resolution is remarkable.

Another example: The analysis of three superposed sinusoidal signals   with STFT and wavelet-transformation.

 

Wavelet compression

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Wavelet compression is a form of data compression well suited for image compression (sometimes also video compression and audio compression). Notable implementations are JPEG 2000, DjVu and ECW for still images, JPEG XS, CineForm, and the BBC's Dirac. The goal is to store image data in as little space as possible in a file. Wavelet compression can be either lossless or lossy.[6]

Using a wavelet transform, the wavelet compression methods are adequate for representing transients, such as percussion sounds in audio, or high-frequency components in two-dimensional images, for example an image of stars on a night sky. This means that the transient elements of a data signal can be represented by a smaller amount of information than would be the case if some other transform, such as the more widespread discrete cosine transform, had been used.

Discrete wavelet transform has been successfully applied for the compression of electrocardiograph (ECG) signals[7] In this work, the high correlation between the corresponding wavelet coefficients of signals of successive cardiac cycles is utilized employing linear prediction.

Wavelet compression is not effective for all kinds of data. Wavelet compression handles transient signals well. But smooth, periodic signals are better compressed using other methods, particularly traditional harmonic analysis in the frequency domain with Fourier-related transforms. Compressing data that has both transient and periodic characteristics may be done with hybrid techniques that use wavelets along with traditional harmonic analysis. For example, the Vorbis audio codec primarily uses the modified discrete cosine transform to compress audio (which is generally smooth and periodic), however allows the addition of a hybrid wavelet filter bank for improved reproduction of transients.[8]

See Diary Of An x264 Developer: The problems with wavelets (2010) for discussion of practical issues of current methods using wavelets for video compression.

Method

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First a wavelet transform is applied. This produces as many coefficients as there are pixels in the image (i.e., there is no compression yet since it is only a transform). These coefficients can then be compressed more easily because the information is statistically concentrated in just a few coefficients. This principle is called transform coding. After that, the coefficients are quantized and the quantized values are entropy encoded and/or run length encoded.

A few 1D and 2D applications of wavelet compression use a technique called "wavelet footprints".[9][10]

Evaluation

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Requirement for image compression

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For most natural images, the spectrum density of lower frequency is higher.[11] As a result, information of the low frequency signal (reference signal) is generally preserved, while the information in the detail signal is discarded. From the perspective of image compression and reconstruction, a wavelet should meet the following criteria while performing image compression:

  • Being able to transform more original image into the reference signal.
  • Highest fidelity reconstruction based on the reference signal.
  • Should not lead to artifacts in the image reconstructed from the reference signal alone.

Requirement for shift variance and ringing behavior

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Wavelet image compression system involves filters and decimation, so it can be described as a linear shift-variant system. A typical wavelet transformation diagram is displayed below:

 

The transformation system contains two analysis filters (a low pass filter   and a high pass filter  ), a decimation process, an interpolation process, and two synthesis filters (  and  ). The compression and reconstruction system generally involves low frequency components, which is the analysis filters   for image compression and the synthesis filters   for reconstruction. To evaluate such system, we can input an impulse   and observe its reconstruction  ; The optimal wavelet are those who bring minimum shift variance and sidelobe to  . Even though wavelet with strict shift variance is not realistic, it is possible to select wavelet with only slight shift variance. For example, we can compare the shift variance of two filters:[12]

Biorthogonal filters for wavelet image compression
Length Filter coefficients Regularity
Wavelet filter 1 H0 9 .852699, .377402, -.110624, -.023849, .037828 1.068
G0 7 .788486, .418092, -.040689, -.064539 1.701
Wavelet filter 2 H0 6 .788486, .047699, -.129078 0.701
G0 10 .615051, .133389, -.067237, .006989, .018914 2.068

By observing the impulse responses of the two filters, we can conclude that the second filter is less sensitive to the input location (i.e. it is less shift variant).

Another important issue for image compression and reconstruction is the system's oscillatory behavior, which might lead to severe undesired artifacts in the reconstructed image. To achieve this, the wavelet filters should have a large peak to sidelobe ratio.

So far we have discussed about one-dimension transformation of the image compression system. This issue can be extended to two dimension, while a more general term - shiftable multiscale transforms - is proposed.[13]

Derivation of impulse response

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As mentioned earlier, impulse response can be used to evaluate the image compression/reconstruction system.

For the input sequence  , the reference signal   after one level of decomposition is   goes through decimation by a factor of two, while   is a low pass filter. Similarly, the next reference signal   is obtained by   goes through decimation by a factor of two. After L levels of decomposition (and decimation), the analysis response is obtained by retaining one out of every   samples:  .

On the other hand, to reconstruct the signal x(n), we can consider a reference signal  . If the detail signals   are equal to zero for  , then the reference signal at the previous stage (  stage) is  , which is obtained by interpolating   and convoluting with  . Similarly, the procedure is iterated to obtain the reference signal   at stage  . After L iterations, the synthesis impulse response is calculated:  , which relates the reference signal   and the reconstructed signal.

To obtain the overall L level analysis/synthesis system, the analysis and synthesis responses are combined as below:

 .

Finally, the peak to first sidelobe ratio and the average second sidelobe of the overall impulse response   can be used to evaluate the wavelet image compression performance.

Comparison with Fourier transform and time-frequency analysis

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Transform Representation Input
Fourier transform     : frequency
Time–frequency analysis     time;   frequency
Wavelet transform     scaling ;   time shift factor

Wavelets have some slight benefits over Fourier transforms in reducing computations when examining specific frequencies. However, they are rarely more sensitive, and indeed, the common Morlet wavelet is mathematically identical to a short-time Fourier transform using a Gaussian window function.[14] The exception is when searching for signals of a known, non-sinusoidal shape (e.g., heartbeats); in that case, using matched wavelets can outperform standard STFT/Morlet analyses.[15]

Other practical applications

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The wavelet transform can provide us with the frequency of the signals and the time associated to those frequencies, making it very convenient for its application in numerous fields. For instance, signal processing of accelerations for gait analysis,[16] for fault detection,[17] for the analysis of seasonal displacements of landslides,[18] for design of low power pacemakers and also in ultra-wideband (UWB) wireless communications.[19][20][21]

  1. Discretizing of the   axis

    Applied the following discretization of frequency and time:

     

    Leading to wavelets of the form, the discrete formula for the basis wavelet:

     

    Such discrete wavelets can be used for the transformation:

     
  2. Implementation via the FFT (fast Fourier transform)

    As apparent from wavelet-transformation representation (shown below)

     

    where   is scaling factor,   represents time shift factor

    and as already mentioned in this context, the wavelet-transformation corresponds to a convolution of a function   and a wavelet-function. A convolution can be implemented as a multiplication in the frequency domain. With this the following approach of implementation results into:

    • Fourier-transformation of signal   with the FFT
    • Selection of a discrete scaling factor  
    • Scaling of the wavelet-basis-function by this factor   and subsequent FFT of this function
    • Multiplication with the transformed signal YFFT of the first step
    • Inverse transformation of the product into the time domain results in   for different discrete values of   and a discrete value of  
    • Back to the second step, until all discrete scaling values for  are processed
    There are many different types of wavelet transforms for specific purposes. See also a full list of wavelet-related transforms but the common ones are listed below: Mexican hat wavelet, Haar Wavelet, Daubechies wavelet, triangular wavelet.
  3. Fault detection in electrical power systems.[22]
  4. Locally adaptive statistical estimation of functions whose smoothness varies substantially over the domain, or more specifically, estimation of functions that are sparse in the wavelet domain.[23]

Time-causal wavelets

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For processing temporal signals in real time, it is essential that the wavelet filters do not access signal values from the future as well as that minimal temporal latencies can be obtained. Time-causal wavelets representations have been developed by Szu et al[24] and Lindeberg,[25] with the latter method also involving a memory-efficient time-recursive implementation.

Synchro-squeezed transform

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Synchro-squeezed transform can significantly enhance temporal and frequency resolution of time-frequency representation obtained using conventional wavelet transform.[26][27]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Meyer, Yves (1992), Wavelets and Operators, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-42000-8
  2. ^ Chui, Charles K. (1992), An Introduction to Wavelets, San Diego, CA: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-174584-8
  3. ^ Daubechies, Ingrid. (1992), Ten Lectures on Wavelets, SIAM, ISBN 978-0-89871-274-2
  4. ^ Akansu, Ali N.; Haddad, Richard A. (1992), Multiresolution Signal Decomposition: Transforms, Subbands, and Wavelets, Boston, MA: Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-12-047141-6
  5. ^ Ghaderpour, E.; Pagiatakis, S. D.; Hassan, Q. K. (2021). "A Survey on Change Detection and Time Series Analysis with Applications". Applied Sciences. 11 (13): 6141. doi:10.3390/app11136141. hdl:11573/1655273.
  6. ^ JPEG 2000, for example, may use a 5/3 wavelet for lossless (reversible) transform and a 9/7 wavelet for lossy (irreversible) transform.
  7. ^ Ramakrishnan, A.G.; Saha, S. (1997). "ECG coding by wavelet-based linear prediction" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering. 44 (12): 1253–1261. doi:10.1109/10.649997. PMID 9401225. S2CID 8834327.
  8. ^ "Vorbis I specification". Xiph.Org Foundation. July 4, 2020. Archived from the original on April 3, 2022. Retrieved April 10, 2022. Vorbis I is a forward-adaptive monolithic transform CODEC based on the Modified Discrete Cosine Transform. The codec is structured to allow addition of a hybrid wavelet filterbank in Vorbis II to offer better transient response and reproduction using a transform better suited to localized time events.
  9. ^ N. Malmurugan, A. Shanmugam, S. Jayaraman and V. V. Dinesh Chander. "A New and Novel Image Compression Algorithm Using Wavelet Footprints"
  10. ^ Ho Tatt Wei and Jeoti, V. "A wavelet footprints-based compression scheme for ECG signals". Ho Tatt Wei; Jeoti, V. (2004). "A wavelet footprints-based compression scheme for ECG signals". 2004 IEEE Region 10 Conference TENCON 2004. Vol. A. p. 283. doi:10.1109/TENCON.2004.1414412. ISBN 0-7803-8560-8. S2CID 43806122.
  11. ^ J. Field, David (1987). "Relations between the statistics of natural images and the response properties of cortical cells" (PDF). J. Opt. Soc. Am. A. 4 (12): 2379–2394. Bibcode:1987JOSAA...4.2379F. doi:10.1364/JOSAA.4.002379. PMID 3430225.
  12. ^ Villasenor, John D. (August 1995). "Wavelet Filter Evaluation for Image Compression". IEEE Transactions on Image Processing. 4 (8): 1053–60. Bibcode:1995ITIP....4.1053V. doi:10.1109/83.403412. PMID 18291999.
  13. ^ Simoncelli, E.P.; Freeman, W.T.; Adelson, E.H.; Heeger, D.J. (1992). "Shiftable multiscale transforms". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 38 (2): 587–607. doi:10.1109/18.119725. S2CID 43701174.
  14. ^ Bruns, Andreas (2004). "Fourier-, Hilbert- and wavelet-based signal analysis: are they really different approaches?". Journal of Neuroscience Methods. 137 (2): 321–332. doi:10.1016/j.jneumeth.2004.03.002. PMID 15262077. S2CID 21880274.
  15. ^ Krantz, Steven G. (1999). A Panorama of Harmonic Analysis. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 0-88385-031-1.
  16. ^ Martin, E. (2011). "Novel method for stride length estimation with body area network accelerometers". 2011 IEEE Topical Conference on Biomedical Wireless Technologies, Networks, and Sensing Systems. pp. 79–82. doi:10.1109/BIOWIRELESS.2011.5724356. ISBN 978-1-4244-8316-7. S2CID 37689047.
  17. ^ Liu, Jie (2012). "Shannon wavelet spectrum analysis on truncated vibration signals for machine incipient fault detection". Measurement Science and Technology. 23 (5): 1–11. Bibcode:2012MeScT..23e5604L. doi:10.1088/0957-0233/23/5/055604. S2CID 121684952.
  18. ^ Tomás, R.; Li, Z.; Lopez-Sanchez, J. M.; Liu, P.; Singleton, A. (June 1, 2016). "Using wavelet tools to analyse seasonal variations from InSAR time-series data: a case study of the Huangtupo landslide". Landslides. 13 (3): 437–450. Bibcode:2016Lands..13..437T. doi:10.1007/s10346-015-0589-y. ISSN 1612-5118.
  19. ^ Akansu, A. N.; Serdijn, W. A.; Selesnick, I. W. (2010). "Emerging applications of wavelets: A review" (PDF). Physical Communication. 3: 1–18. doi:10.1016/j.phycom.2009.07.001.
  20. ^ Sheybani, E.; Javidi, G. (December 2009). "Dimensionality Reduction and Noise Removal in Wireless Sensor Network Datasets". 2009 Second International Conference on Computer and Electrical Engineering. Vol. 2. pp. 674–677. doi:10.1109/ICCEE.2009.282. ISBN 978-1-4244-5365-8. S2CID 17066179.
  21. ^ Sheybani, E. O.; Javidi, G. (May 2012). "Multi-resolution filter banks for enhanced SAR imaging". 2012 International Conference on Systems and Informatics (ICSAI2012). pp. 2702–2706. doi:10.1109/ICSAI.2012.6223611. ISBN 978-1-4673-0199-2. S2CID 16302915.
  22. ^ Silva, K. M.; Souza, B. A.; Brito, N. S. D. (October 2006). "Fault detection and classification in transmission lines based on wavelet transform and ANN". IEEE Transactions on Power Delivery. 21 (4): 2058–2063. doi:10.1109/TPWRD.2006.876659. S2CID 36881450.
  23. ^ Wasserman, L.A. (2005). All of Nonparametric Statistics.
  24. ^ Szu, Harold H.; Telfer, Brian A.; Lohmann, Adolf W. (1992). "Causal analytical wavelet transform". Optical Engineering. 31 (9): 1825. Bibcode:1992OptEn..31.1825S. doi:10.1117/12.59911.
  25. ^ Lindeberg, T. (January 23, 2023). "A time-causal and time-recursive scale-covariant scale-space representation of temporal signals and past time". Biological Cybernetics. 117 (1–2): 21–59. doi:10.1007/s00422-022-00953-6. PMC 10160219. PMID 36689001.
  26. ^ Daubechies, Ingrid; Lu, Jianfeng; Wu, Hau-Tieng (December 12, 2009). "Synchrosqueezed Wavelet Transforms: a Tool for Empirical Mode Decomposition". arXiv:0912.2437 [math.NA].
  27. ^ Qu, Hongya; Li, Tiantian; Chen, Genda (January 1, 2019). "Synchro-squeezed adaptive wavelet transform with optimum parameters for arbitrary time series". Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing. 114: 366–377. Bibcode:2019MSSP..114..366Q. doi:10.1016/j.ymssp.2018.05.020. S2CID 126007150.

Further reading

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