- Autocorrelation
Autocorrelation is a mathematical tool for finding repeating patterns, such as the presence of a periodic signal which has been buried under noise, or identifying the
missing fundamental frequency in a signal implied by itsharmonic frequencies. It is used frequently insignal processing for analyzing functions or series of values, such astime domain signals. Informally, it is the similarity between observations as a function of the time separation between them.More precisely, it is thecross-correlation of a signal with itself.Definitions
Different definitions of autocorrelation are in use depending on the field of study which is being considered and not all of them are equivalent. In some fields, the term is used interchangeably with
autocovariance .Statistics
In
statistics , the autocorrelation function (ACF) of a random process describes thecorrelation between the process at different points in time. Let "X""t" be the value of the process at time "t" (where "t" may be an integer for adiscrete-time process or a real number for a continuous-time process).If "X""t" hasmean μ andvariance σ2 then the definition of the ACF is:
where "E" is the
expected value operator. Note that this expression is not well-defined for all time series or processes, since the variance σ2 may be zero (for a constant process) or infinite. If the function "R" is well-defined its value must lie in the range [−1, 1] , with 1 indicating perfect correlation and −1 indicating perfect anti-correlation.If "X""t" is second-order stationary then the ACF depends only on the difference between "t" and "s" and can be expressed as a function of a single variable. This gives the more familiar form
:
where "k" is the lag, | "t" − "s" |. It is common practice in many disciplines to drop the normalization by σ2 and use the term "autocorrelation" interchangeably with "autocovariance".
For a discrete time series of length "n" {"X"1, "X"2, … "X""n"} with known mean and variance, an estimate of the autocorrelation may be obtained as
:
for any positive integer "k" < "n". When the true mean μ is known, this estimate is unbiased. If the true mean and variance of the process are not known there are a several possibilities:
* If μ and σ2 are replaced by the standard formulae for sample mean and sample variance, then this is a biased estimate.
* Aperiodogram -based estimate replaces "n"-"k" in the above formula with "n". This estimate is always biased; however, it usually has a smaller mean square error. ["Spectral analysis and time series", M.B. Priestley (London, New York : Academic Press, 1982)] [cite book | last=Percival | first=Donald B. | coauthors=Andrew T. Walden | title=Spectral Analysis for Physical Applications: Multitaper and Conventional Univariate Techniques | year=1993 | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=0-521-43541-2 | pages=pp190--195]
* Other possibilities derive from treating the two portions of data {"X"1, "X"2, … "X""n"-"k"} and {"X""k"+1, "X"2, … "X""n"} separately and calculating separate sample means and/or sample variances for use in defining the estimate.The advantage of estimates of the last type is that the set of estimated autocorrelations, as a function of "k", then form a function which is a valid autocorrelation function in the sense that it is possible to define a theoretical process having exactly that autocorrelation function. Other estimates can suffer from the problem that, if they are used to calculate the variance of a linear combination of the "X"'s, the variance calculated may turn out to be negative.Signal processing
In
signal processing , the above definition is often used without the normalization, that is, without subtracting the mean and dividing by the variance. When the autocorrelation function is normalized by mean and variance, it is sometimes referred to as the autocorrelation coefficient.Patrick F. Dunn, "Measurement and Data Analysis for Engineering and Science," New York: McGraw–Hill, 2005 ISBN 0-07-282538-3]Given a signal "f"("t"), the continuous autocorrelation "Rff"(τ) is most often defined as the continuous cross-correlation integral of "f"("t") with itself, at lag "τ".
:
where represents the
complex conjugate and representsconvolution . For areal function , .The discrete autocorrelation "R" at lag "j" for a discrete signal "xn" is
:
The above definitions work for signals that are square integrable, or square summable, that is, of finite energy. Signals that "last forever" are treated instead as random processes, in which case different definitions are needed, based on expected values. For wide-sense-stationary random processes, the autocorrelations are defined as
::
For processes that are not
stationary , these will also be functions of "t", or "n".For processes that are also
ergodic , the expectation can be replaced by the limit of a time average. The autocorrelation of an ergodic process is sometimes defined as or equated tox]::
These definitions have the advantage that they give sensible well-defined single-parameter results for periodic functions, even when those functions are not the output of stationary ergodic processes.
Alternatively, signals that "last forever" can be treated by a short-time autocorrelation function analysis, using finite time integrals. (See
short-time Fourier transform for a related process.)Multi-
dimension al autocorrelation is defined similarly. For example, in three dimensions the autocorrelation of a square-summablediscrete signal would be:
When mean values are subtracted from signals before computing an autocorrelation function, the resulting function is usually called an auto-covariance function.
Properties
In the following, we will describe properties of one-dimensional autocorrelations only, since most properties are easily transferred from the one-dimensional case to the multi-dimensional cases.
* A fundamental property of the autocorrelation is symmetry, "R"("i") = "R"(−"i"), which is easy to prove from the definition. In the continuous case, the autocorrelation is an
even function :::when "f" is a real function and the autocorrelation is a
Hermitian function ::
:when "f" is a
complex function .* The continuous autocorrelation function reaches its peak at the origin, where it takes a real value, i.e. for any delay "τ", . This is a consequence of the
Cauchy–Schwarz inequality . The same result holds in the discrete case.* The autocorrelation of a
periodic function is, itself, periodic with the very same period.* The autocorrelation of the sum of two completely uncorrelated functions (the cross-correlation is zero for all τ) is the sum of the autocorrelations of each function separately.
* Since autocorrelation is a specific type of
cross-correlation , it maintains all the properties of cross-correlation.* The autocorrelation of a continuous-time
white noise signal will have a strong peak (represented by aDirac delta function ) at τ = 0 and will be absolutely 0 for all other τ.* The
Wiener–Khinchin theorem relates the autocorrelation function to the power spectral density via theFourier transform :::
::
* For real-valued functions, the symmetric autocorrelation function has a real symmetric transform, so the
Wiener–Khinchin theorem can be re-expressed in terms of real cosines only:::
::
Regression analysis
In
regression analysis using time series data, autocorrelation of the residuals ("error terms", ineconometrics ) is a problem.Autocorrelation violates the ordinary least squares (OLS) assumption that the error terms are uncorrelated. While it does not bias the OLS coefficient estimates, the standard errors tend to be underestimated (and the t-scores overestimated) when the autocorrelations of the errors at low lags are positive.
The traditional test for the presence of first-order autocorrelation is the
Durbin–Watson statistic or, if the explanatory variables include a lagged dependent variable, Durbin's h statistic. A more flexible test, covering autocorrelation of higher orders and applicable whether or not the regressors include lags of the dependent variable, is theBreusch–Godfrey test . This involves an auxiliary regression, wherein the residuals obtained from estimating the model of interest are regressed on (a) the original regressors and (b) "k" lags of the residuals, where "k" is the order of the test. The simplest version of the test statistic from this auxiliary regression is "TR"2, where "T" is the sample size and "R"2 is thecoefficient of determination . Under the null hypothesis of no autocorrelation, this statistic isasymptotically distributed as with "k" degrees of freedom.Responses to nonzero autocorrelation include generalized least squares and
Newey–West standard errors . [cite book | title = An Introduction to Modern Econometrics Using Stata | author = Christopher F. Baum | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=acxtAylXvGMC&pg=PA141&ots=ROZHFuNnkG&dq=newey-west-standard-errors+generalized-least-squares&ei=tSTBRvWGGILIoAKHrajwBQ&sig=9Ypgd9sGX42SJAFRZCnINieG8Mk#PPA141,M1 | publisher = Stata Press | year = 2006 | isbn = 1597180130]Applications
* One application of autocorrelation is the measurement of optical spectra and the measurement of very-short-duration
light pulses produced bylaser s, both using optical autocorrelators.* In optics, normalized autocorrelations and cross-correlations give the
degree of coherence of an electromagnetic field.* In
signal processing , autocorrelation can give information about repeating events likemusic al beats orpulsar frequencies, though it cannot tell the position in time of the beat. It can also be used to estimate the pitch of a musical tone.* Autocorrelation in space rather than time, via the
Patterson function , is used by X-ray diffractionists to help recover the "Fourier phase information" on atom positions not available through diffraction alone.* Spatial autocorrelation between sample locations also helps one estimate mean value uncertainties when sampling a heterogeneous population.
* The
SEQUEST algorithm for analyzing mass spectra makes use of autocorrelation in conjunction withcross-correlation to score the similarity of an observed spectrum to an idealized spectrum representing apeptide .ee also
*
Correlation function
*Cross-correlation
*Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy
*Optical autocorrelation
*Pitch detection algorithm
*Variance External links
*
* [http://www.dsprelated.com/comp.dsp/keyword/Autocorrelation.php Autocorrelation articles in Comp.DSP (DSP usenet group).]References
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