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Demodulation as Probabilistic Inference

Turner, RE and Sahani, M (2011) Demodulation as Probabilistic Inference. IEEE T AUDIO SPEECH , 19 (8) 2398 - 2411. 10.1109/TASL.2011.2135852.

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Abstract

Demodulation is an ill-posed problem whenever both carrier and envelope signals are broadband and unknown. Here, we approach this problem using the methods of probabilistic inference. The new approach, called Probabilistic Amplitude Demodulation (PAD), is computationally challenging but improves on existing methods in a number of ways. By contrast to previous approaches to demodulation, it satisfies five key desiderata: PAD has soft constraints because it is probabilistic; PAD is able to automatically adjust to the signal because it learns parameters; PAD is user-steerable because the solution can be shaped by user-specific prior information; PAD is robust to broad-band noise because this is modeled explicitly; and PAD's solution is self-consistent, empirically satisfying a Carrier Identity property. Furthermore, the probabilistic view naturally encompasses noise and uncertainty, allowing PAD to cope with missing data and return error bars on carrier and envelope estimates. Finally, we show that when PAD is applied to a bandpass-filtered signal, the stop-band energy of the inferred carrier is minimal, making PAD well-suited to sub-band demodulation.

Type:Article
Title:Demodulation as Probabilistic Inference
DOI:10.1109/TASL.2011.2135852
Keywords:Carrier, demodulation, envelope, inference, learning, TEMPORAL ENVELOPE, FINE-STRUCTURE, AUDITORY-PERCEPTION, SPEECH RECOGNITION, MODULATION, FREQUENCY, AMPLITUDE, SIGNALS, CHANNELS, NUMBER
UCL classification:UCL > School of Life and Medical Sciences > Faculty of Life Sciences > Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit

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