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A Python implementation of a multitaper window method for estimating Wigner spectra for certain locally stationary processes

Project description

LSPOpt

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This module is a Python implementation of the multitaper window method described in [1] for estimating Wigner spectra for certain locally stationary processes.

Abstract from [1]:

This paper investigates the time-discrete multitapers that give a mean square error optimal Wigner spectrum estimate for a class of locally stationary processes (LSPs). The accuracy in the estimation of the time-variable Wigner spectrum of the LSP is evaluated and compared with other frequently used methods. The optimal multitapers are also approximated by Hermite functions, which is computationally more efficient, and the errors introduced by this approximation are studied. Additionally, the number of windows included in a multitaper spectrum estimate is often crucial and an investigation of the error caused by limiting this number is made. Finally, the same optimal set of weights can be stored and utilized for different window lengths. As a result, the optimal multitapers are shown to be well approximated by Hermite functions, and a limited number of windows can be used for a mean square error optimal spectrogram estimate.

Installation

Install via pip:

pip install lspopt

Testing

Test with pytest:

pytest tests/ 

Tests are run at every commit to GitHub and the results of this, as well as test coverage, can be studied at Azure Pipelines.

Usage

To generate the taper windows only, use the lspopt method:

from lspopt import lspopt
H, w = lspopt(N=256, c_parameter=20.0)

There is also a convenience method for using the SciPy spectrogram method with the lspopt multitaper windows:

from lspopt import spectrogram_lspopt
f, t, Sxx = spectrogram_lspopt(x, fs, c_parameter=20.0)

This can then be plotted with e.g. matplotlib.

Example

One can generate a chirp process realisation and run spectrogram methods on this.

import numpy as np
from scipy.signal import chirp, spectrogram
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

from lspopt.lsp import spectrogram_lspopt

fs = 10e3
N = 1e5
amp = 2 * np.sqrt(2)
noise_power = 0.001 * fs / 2
time = np.arange(N) / fs
freq = np.linspace(1e3, 2e3, N)
x = amp * chirp(time, 1e3, 2.0, 6e3, method='quadratic') + \
    np.random.normal(scale=np.sqrt(noise_power), size=time.shape)

f, t, Sxx = spectrogram(x, fs)

ax = plt.subplot(211)
ax.pcolormesh(t, f, Sxx)
ax.set_ylabel('Frequency [Hz]')
ax.set_xlabel('Time [sec]')

f, t, Sxx = spectrogram_lspopt(x, fs, c_parameter=20.0)

ax = plt.subplot(212)
ax.pcolormesh(t, f, Sxx)
ax.set_ylabel('Frequency [Hz]')
ax.set_xlabel('Time [sec]')

plt.show()

Spectrogram plot Top: Using SciPy's spectrogram method. Bottom: Using LSPOpt's spectrogram solution.

References

[1] Hansson-Sandsten, M. (2011). Optimal multitaper Wigner spectrum estimation of a class of locally stationary processes using Hermite functions. EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, 2011, 10.

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