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Reconstruction of Signal using Interpolation01:10

Reconstruction of Signal using Interpolation

Signal processing techniques are essential for accurately converting continuous signals to digital formats and vice versa. When a continuous signal is sampled with a period T, the resulting sampled signal exhibits replicas of the original spectrum in the frequency domain, spaced at intervals equal to the sampling frequency. To handle this sampled signal, a zero-order hold method can be applied, which creates a piecewise constant signal by retaining each sample's value until the next sampling...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 7, 2026

Quantifying Intermembrane Distances with Serial Image Dilations
07:45

Quantifying Intermembrane Distances with Serial Image Dilations

Published on: September 28, 2018

Lossless image compression with projection-based and adaptive reversible integer wavelet transforms.

Aaron T Deever1, Sheila S Hemami

  • 1Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, NY 14650-1816, USA. aaron.deever@kodak.com

IEEE Transactions on Image Processing : a Publication of the IEEE Signal Processing Society
|February 2, 2008
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new projection technique enhances reversible integer wavelet transforms for superior lossless image compression. This method optimizes prediction steps, improving performance beyond current standards.

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jul 7, 2026

Quantifying Intermembrane Distances with Serial Image Dilations
07:45

Quantifying Intermembrane Distances with Serial Image Dilations

Published on: September 28, 2018

Area of Science:

  • Digital image processing
  • Data compression algorithms
  • Wavelet theory

Background:

  • Reversible integer wavelet transforms are crucial for lossless image compression.
  • The JPEG2000 standard utilizes these transforms, highlighting their importance.
  • Existing methods have limitations in optimizing compression performance.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce a projection-based technique for enhancing reversible integer wavelet transforms.
  • To improve the lossless compression performance of these transforms.
  • To provide a unified framework for wavelet-based lossless image compression.

Main Methods:

  • Developed a projection technique to predict wavelet transform coefficients.
  • Applied the technique to optimize fixed prediction steps in lifting-based wavelet transforms.
  • Implemented an adaptive prediction scheme using the projection technique based on modeling context.

Main Results:

  • The projection technique effectively reduces the first-order entropy of transform coefficients.
  • Achieved superior lossless compression performance compared to existing fixed and adaptive lifting-based transforms.
  • Demonstrated that the technique unifies various wavelet-based lossless image compression results.

Conclusions:

  • The projection technique offers a generalized and effective framework for improving reversible integer wavelet transforms.
  • This approach significantly enhances lossless image compression performance.
  • The unified framework simplifies and explains prior research in the field.