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  2. Roofline model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roofline_model

    In this formulation of the roofline model, there are only two parameters, the peak performance and the peak bandwidth of the specific architecture, and one variable, the arithmetic intensity. The peak performance, in general expressed as GFLOPS , can be usually derived from benchmarking , while the peak bandwidth, that references to peak DRAM ...

  3. Cross-correlation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-correlation

    The left graph shows a green function G that is phase-shifted relative to function F by a time displacement of 𝜏. The middle graph shows the function F and the phase-shifted G represented together as a Lissajous curve. Integrating F multiplied by the phase-shifted G produces the right graph, the cross-correlation across all values of 𝜏.

  4. Transfer function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_function

    The transfer function of a two-port electronic circuit, such as an amplifier, might be a two-dimensional graph of the scalar voltage at the output as a function of the scalar voltage applied to the input; the transfer function of an electromechanical actuator might be the mechanical displacement of the movable arm as a function of electric ...

  5. Watts–Strogatz model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watts–Strogatz_model

    They do not account for the formation of hubs. Formally, the degree distribution of ER graphs converges to a Poisson distribution, rather than a power law observed in many real-world, scale-free networks. [3] The Watts and Strogatz model was designed as the simplest possible model that addresses the first of the two limitations. It accounts for ...

  6. Coherence (signal processing) - Wikipedia

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

    The coherence (sometimes called magnitude-squared coherence) between two signals x(t) and y(t) is a real-valued function that is defined as: [1] [2] = | | ()where G xy (f) is the Cross-spectral density between x and y, and G xx (f) and G yy (f) the auto spectral density of x and y respectively.

  7. Two-graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-graph

    The adjacency matrix of a two-graph is the adjacency matrix of the corresponding signed complete graph; thus it is symmetric, is zero on the diagonal, and has entries ±1 off the diagonal. If G is the graph corresponding to the signed complete graph Σ, this matrix is called the (0, −1, 1)-adjacency matrix or Seidel adjacency matrix of G .

  8. Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthogonal_frequency...

    In multi-carrier code-division multiple access (MC-CDMA), also known as OFDM-CDMA, OFDM is combined with CDMA spread spectrum communication for coding separation of the users. Co-channel interference can be mitigated, meaning that manual fixed channel allocation (FCA) frequency planning is simplified, or complex dynamic channel allocation (DCA ...

  9. Scale-free network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale-free_network

    Mashaghi A. et al., for example, demonstrated that a transformation which converts random graphs to their edge-dual graphs (or line graphs) produces an ensemble of graphs with nearly the same degree distribution, but with degree correlations and a significantly higher clustering coefficient. Scale free graphs, as such, remain scale free under ...