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An introduction to signal detection and estimation (2nd ed.)
H. Vincent Poor
- 01 Apr 1994
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About: The article was published on 01 Apr 1994. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Detection theory.
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Citations
Multi-sensor generalized sequential probability ratio test using level-triggered sampling
Shang Li,Xiaoou Li,Xiaodong Wang,Jingchen Liu +3 more
- 01 Dec 2015
TL;DR: The proposed LTS-GSPRT amounts to the algorithm where each sensor successively reports the decisions of local GSPRTs to the fusion center to preserve the same asymptotic performance of the centralized GSRPT as the local thresholds and global thresholds grow large at different rates.
•Dissertation
Probabilistic modeling of wavelet coefficients for processing of image and video signals
S. M. Mahbubur Rahman
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: It is shown that the MGH PDF fits the empirical density function better than the existing PDFs that use a limited number of parameters do, and should play a significant role in wavelet-based image and video signal processing.
3
•Posted Content
A General Coding Scheme for Two-User Fading Interference Channels
TL;DR: A Han-Kobayashi based achievable scheme is presented for ergodic fading two-user Gaussian interference channels with perfect channel state information at all nodes and Gaussian codebooks with no time-sharing.
A Model for Single Neuron Activity With Refractory Effects and Spike Rate Estimation Techniques
Scott Monk,Harry Leib +1 more
- 01 Apr 2017
TL;DR: This work presents a neural spiking model, and a Maximum Likelihood (ML) estimation framework for time varying firing rates, that account for history dependencies in spike trains, and shows an improvement in goodness of fit over estimators that do not account for the refractory effect.
3
•Proceedings Article
Coding of time-varying hormonal signals in intracellular calcium spike trains.
K. Prank,Christof Schöfl,L. Läer,Wagner M,von zur Mühlen A,Georg Brabant,Fabrizio Gabbiani +6 more
- 01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: The results suggest that intracellular [Ca2+]i spike trains convey faithful information on temporal variations of extracellular hormonal concentrations at scales of 30-200 sec, corresponding to cut-off frequencies between 5 and 30 mHz of the random hormonal stimulation.
3
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