Cross-correlation

In signal processing, cross-correlation is a measure of similarity of two signals, commonly used to find features in an unknown signal by comparing it to a known one. It is a function of the relative time between the signals, is sometimes called the sliding dot product, and has applications in pattern recognition and cryptanalysis.

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
archivolt
church turing deutsch principle
gymnure
list of spanish birds: passerines
periodontics
football at the 1906 summer olympics
an historical account of two notable corruptions of scripture
to hell with the devil
croatian radiotelevision
bktv sat
patrik elis
green sauce
fans
kenneth pollack
patty wagstaff
mozilla mail & newsgroups
prose works other than science and health
jimmy timmy power hour
martin biron
a deepness in the sky
tin (newsreader)
soldiers under command
charles nicolle
linda lusardi
maori party
samuel kane
football at the 1908 summer olympics
named pipe
sri kalahasti
feast
the yellow and black attack
mathieu biron
the outsiders (comics)
kelesh begi of abkhazia
christian science hymnal
dan blackburn
manic panic
evonne hsu
jason blake
brad bombardir
antonia maury
corin nemec
advanced space vision system
jason botterill