Sparse Signal Detection from Incoherent Projections
- 24 July 2006
- proceedings article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Abstract
Conference PaperThe recently introduced theory of Compressed Sensing (CS) enables the reconstruction or approximation of sparse or compressible signals from a small set of incoherent projections; often the number of projections can be much smaller than the number of Nyquist rate samples. In this paper, we show that the CS framework is information scalable to a wide range of statistical inference tasks. In particular, we demonstrate how CS principles can solve signal detection problems given incoherent measurements without ever reconstructing the signals involved. We specifically study the case of signal dection in strong inference and noise and propose an Incoherent Detection and Estimation Algorithm (IDEA) based on Matching Pursuit. The number of measurements and computations necessary for successful detection using IDEA is significantly lower than that necessary for successful reconstruction. Simulations show that IDEA is very resilient to strong interference, additive noise, and measurement quantization. When combined with random measurements, IDEA is applicable to a wide range of different signal classes.National Science FoundationAir Force Office of Scientific ResearchOffice of Naval ResearcKeywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signal Recovery From Random Measurements Via Orthogonal Matching PursuitIEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 2007
- Random Filters for Compressive Sampling and ReconstructionPublished by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) ,2006
- Robust uncertainty principles: exact signal reconstruction from highly incomplete frequency informationIEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 2006
- Atomic Decomposition by Basis PursuitSIAM Journal on Scientific Computing, 1998
- Matching pursuits with time-frequency dictionariesIEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 1993
- Shear madness: new orthonormal bases and frames using chirp functionsIEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 1993