Toeplitz and circulant matrices: a review
Communications and Information Theory
Including probabilistic target detection attributes into map representations
Robotics and Autonomous Systems
A formal framework for stochastic DEVS modeling and simulation
Proceedings of the 2008 Spring simulation multiconference
Retrieving and Recreating Musical Form
Computer Music Modeling and Retrieval. Sense of Sounds
Process variability-aware transient fault modeling and analysis
Proceedings of the 2008 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
Discriminative wavelet packet filter bank selection for pattern recognition
IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing
Is the general form of Renyi's entropy a contrast for source separation?
ICA'07 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Independent component analysis and signal separation
The κ factor: inferring protocol performance using inter-link reception correlation
Proceedings of the sixteenth annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking
IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
Source Coding: Part I of Fundamentals of Source and Video Coding
Foundations and Trends in Signal Processing
On signal representations within the Bayes decision framework
Pattern Recognition
Analysis of WLAN's received signal strength indication for indoor location fingerprinting
Pervasive and Mobile Computing
Identification of ARMA models using intermittent and quantized output observations
Automatica (Journal of IFAC)
On fuzzy solutions for partial differential equations
Fuzzy Sets and Systems
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This volume describes the essential tools and techniques of statistical signal processing. At every stage, theoretical ideas are linked to specific applications in communications and signal processing. The book begins with an overview of basic probability, random objects, expectation, and second-order moment theory, followed by a wide variety of examples of the most popular random process models and their basic uses and properties. Specific applications to the analysis of random signals and systems for communicating, estimating, detecting, modulating, and other processing of signals are interspersed throughout the text.