weighting filter

  • 1Weighting filter — A weighting filter is used to emphasise or suppress some aspects of a phenomenon compared to others, for measurement or other purposes. Contents 1 Audio application …

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  • 2Weighting — The process of weighting involves emphasising some aspects of a phenomenon, or of a set of data giving them more weight in the final effect or result. It is analogous to the practice of adding extra weight to one side of a pair of scales to… …

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  • 3Weighting curve — A Weighting curve is a graph of a set of factors, that are used to weight measured values of a variable according to their importance in relation to some outcome. The most commonly known example is frequency weighting in sound level measurement… …

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  • 4Filter design — is the process of designing a filter (in the sense in which the term is used in signal processing, statistics, and applied mathematics), often a linear shift invariant filter, which satisfies a set of requirements, some of which are contradictory …

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  • 5A-weighting — A graph of the A , B , C and D weightings across the frequency range 10 Hz – 20 kHz Video illustrating A weighting by analyzing a sine sweep (contains audio) A weighting is the most …

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  • 6ITU-R 468 noise weighting — The ITU R 468 weighting curve (originally defined in CCIR recommendation 468) is widely used when measuring noise in audio systems, especially in the UK, Europe, and former countries of the British Empire such as Australia and South Africa. It is …

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  • 7Noise weighting — A noise weighting is a specific amplitude vs. frequency characteristic that is designed to allow subjectively valid measurement of noise. It emphasises the parts of the spectrum that are most important. Usually, noise means audible noise, in… …

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  • 8Psophometric weighting — refers to any weighting curve used in the measurement of noise. In the field of audio engineering it has a more specific meaning, referring to noise weightings used especially in measuring noise on telecommunications circuits. Key standards are… …

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  • 9Kalman filter — Roles of the variables in the Kalman filter. (Larger image here) In statistics, the Kalman filter is a mathematical method named after Rudolf E. Kálmán. Its purpose is to use measurements observed over time, containing noise (random variations)… …

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  • 10Matched filter — In telecommunications, a matched filter (originally known as a North filter[1]) is obtained by correlating a known signal, or template, with an unknown signal to detect the presence of the template in the unknown signal. This is equivalent to… …

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