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From: | Sergei Steshenko |
Subject: | Re: filter raw EEG by frequency bands in time domain |
Date: | Sun, 3 May 2020 20:38:29 +0300 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.7.0 |
On 03/05/2020 19:01, ingber via Help-octave wrote:
Additional note (in reply to one person): I have readhttps://www.mathworks.com/help/signal/ref/bandpass.html , but I'm not sure if this is the best way to proceed. bandpass() seems able to deliver results without an additional step, e.g., not needing both fft and ifft. ----- https://www.PhysicalStudiesInstitute.org -- Sent from:https://octave.1599824.n4.nabble.com/Octave-General-f1599825.html
"bandpass() seems able to deliver results without an additional step, e.g., not needing both fft and ifft" - you have to decide what you really want.
If you are using a typical IIR filter, it's most likely a minimum phase system. This by itself is neither bad nor good, though quite often good - unless you want to compensate for linear distortions introduced by a non-minimum phase system.
With fft -> filter -> ifft approach you can have a filter with arbitrary magnitude response and arbitrary phase response. In a minimum phase system there is strict relation between magnitude and phase responses: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kramers%E2%80%93Kronig_relations -> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kramers%E2%80%93Kronig_relations#Magnitude_(gain)%E2%80%93phase_relation , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_phase#Relationship_of_magnitude_response_to_phase_response .
So, with fft -> filter -> ifft approach you can easily test various filters - because you can arbitrarily assign both magnitude and phase responses. But you have to understand really well what you are doing, especially taking into account wrap around - read the https://dsp.stackexchange.com/questions/51427/how-to-get-around-the-circular-shift-property-of-discrete-fourier-transform thread. You can still use traditional filter - you simply measure its complex frequency response and multiply the signal spectrum by the measured frequency response, then perform ifft.
--Sergei.
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