Preface ix
Chapter 1. The Need for Time-Frequency Analysis 1
1.1. Introduction 1
1.2. Stationary and non-stationary concepts 2
1.2.1. Stationarity 2
1.2.2. Non-stationarity 4
1.3. Temporal representations 5
1.4. Frequency representations of signals 6
1.4.1. Fourier transform 7
1.4.2. Mean frequency, bandwidth and frequency average 10
1.5. Uncertainty principle 12
1.6. Limitation of time analysis and frequency analysis: the need for time-frequency representation 15
1.6.1. Instantaneous frequency 15
1.7. Conclusion 18
1.8. Bibliography 19
Chapter 2. Time-Frequency Analysis: The S-Transform 21
2.1. Introduction 21
2.2. Synthetic signals 22
2.3. The STFT 22
2.4. The WT 24
2.5. The Wigner-Ville distribution 25
2.5.1. The pseudo-WVD 27
2.5.2. The smoothed PWVD 27
2.6. Cohen's class 28
2.7. The S-transform 29
2.7.1. Properties of the S-transform 30
2.7.2. The discrete S-transform 38
2.7.3. The improvement of the S-transform energy concentration 41
2.7.4. The ST-spectrogram 51
2.8. Conclusion 56
2.9. Bibliography 56
Chapter 3. Segmentation and Classification of Heart Sounds Based on the S-Transform 61
3.1. Introduction 61
3.2. Methods and materials 64
3.2.1. Data sets 64
3.2.2. Localization and segmentation of heart sounds 65
3.2.3. Classification of heart sounds 70
3.3. Results and discussion 73
3.3.1. Localization and segmentation results 73
3.3.2. S1 and S2 classification results 77
3.3.3. Murmur detection results 80
3.4. Conclusion 82
3.5. Bibliography 83
Chapter 4. Adaline for the Detection of Electrical Events in Electrical Signals 87
4.1. Introduction 87
4.2. Electric events 88
4.2.1. Power quality 88
4.2.2. Electric events 89
4.3. Adaline 90
4.4. Adaline for frequency estimation 91
4.4.1. Adaline method 91
4.4.2. Results 94
4.5. Adaline for voltage component extraction in unbalanced system 97
4.5.1. Model of the unbalanced voltage system 98
4.5.2. Extraction of the voltage components in the DQ-space 99
4.5.3. Online estimation of the instantaneous phases ?d and ?i 100
4.5.4. Filtering the AC components in the DQ-space 101
4.5.5. Results 104
4.6. Adaline for harmonic current identification and compensation 108
4.6.1. Adaline method 110
4.6.2. Results 115
4.7. Conclusion 117
4.8. Bibliography 118
Chapter 5. FPGA Implementation of the Adaline 121
5.1. Introduction 121
5.2. Instantaneous power theory (IPT) in the APF 122
5.3. Adaline for the computing of the IPT in the PLL 123
5.3.1. Adaline-based PLL 123
5.3.2. A multiplexing approach for hardware consumption reduction 126
5.4. Results 129
5.4.1. Simulation 129
5.4.2. FPGA implementation results 130
5.5. Conclusion 132
5.6. Bibliography 133
Index 135