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  2. General Data Format for Biomedical Signals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Format_for...

    The original GDF specification was introduced in 2005 as a new data format to overcome some of the limitations of the European Data Format for Biosignals (EDF). GDF was also designed to unify a number of file formats which had been designed for very specific applications (for example, in ECG research and EEG analysis). [2]

  3. Biosignal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biosignal

    The term biosignal is often used to refer to bioelectrical signals, but it may refer to both electrical and non-electrical signals. The usual understanding is to refer only to time-varying signals, although spatial parameter variations (e.g. the nucleotide sequence determining the genetic code ) are sometimes subsumed as well.

  4. FLOSS Manuals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FLOSS_Manuals

    Manuals are available as HTML online, or indexed PDF. Additionally manuals can be remixed so anyone can create their own manual and export to indexed PDF, HTML (ZIP/tar) or an 'Ajax' include. In fall 2007, Floss manuals was awarded a 15,000 Euro prize by the Dutch Digital Pioneer fund. [2] It has also been financially supported by Google [3 ...

  5. Handbook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handbook

    A technician referring to an instructional handbook for the operation of a machine Early 20th century handbook for operating a motor car. A handbook is a type of reference work, or other collection of instructions, that is intended to provide ready reference.

  6. Numerical Recipes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_Recipes

    The Numerical Recipes books cover a range of topics that include both classical numerical analysis (interpolation, integration, linear algebra, differential equations, and so on), signal processing (Fourier methods, filtering), statistical treatment of data, and a few topics in machine learning (hidden Markov model, support vector machines).

  7. Sampling (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampling_(signal_processing)

    In signal processing, sampling is the reduction of a continuous-time signal to a discrete-time signal. A common example is the conversion of a sound wave to a sequence of "samples". A sample is a value of the signal at a point in time and/or space; this definition differs from the term's usage in statistics, which refers to a set of such values ...

  8. Finite impulse response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_impulse_response

    A direct form discrete-time FIR filter of order N.The top part is an N-stage delay line with N + 1 taps. Each unit delay is a z −1 operator in Z-transform notation. A lattice-form discrete-time FIR filter of order N.

  9. Linear prediction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_prediction

    Linear prediction is a mathematical operation where future values of a discrete-time signal are estimated as a linear function of previous samples.. In digital signal processing, linear prediction is often called linear predictive coding (LPC) and can thus be viewed as a subset of filter theory.