Introduction to Signal Processing (Prentice Hall Signal Processing Series)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Appropriate for introductory courses on digital signal processing at the junior and senior undergraduate levels. Also appropriate for lab and project-oriented courses and self-study, and can be used as a supplement for first year graduate courses.
Provides an applications-oriented introduction to digital signal processing. Orfandis covers all the basic DSP concepts and methods, such as sampling, discrete-time systems, DFT/FFT algorithms, and filter design. The book emphasizes the algorithmic, computational, and programming aspects of DSP, and includes a large number of worked examples, applications, and computer examples. Applications, such as wavetables and digital audio effects, were chosen to motivate and appeal to undergraduates.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #785359 in Books
- Published on: 1995-12-19
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 798 pages
Customer Reviews
Excellent, concise, and practical
Many DSP books (and I own quite a few) love to delve into the mathematics of the subject, seemingly for its own sake (particularly the dry and dour supposed 'bible' Oppenheim & Shaffer). It is a mathematical subject, and the maths needs to be covered, but not without losing sight of the required end result. A picture can replace a thousand words, and a good diagram can replace a dozen equations. This is where this book succeeds. It includes all the necessary maths without obscuring the overall vision.
It includes many coded examples (in C and pseudocode), including some audio effects which is cool! A section on undersampling is included which I haven't seen in other books.
Certainly as good as the excellent "Digital Signal Processing" by Emmanuel C. Ifeachor, Barry W. Jervis.

