- Signal compression
In
telecommunication , the term signal compression has the following meanings:In analog (usually audio) systems, reduction of the
dynamic range of a signal by controlling it as a function of the inverse relationship of its instantaneous value relative to a specified reference level.Signal compression is usually expressed in dB.
Instantaneous values of the
input signal that are low, relative to the reference level, are increased, and those that are high are decreased.Signal compression is usually accomplished by separate devices called "compressors." It is used for many purposes, such as (a) improving signal-to-
noise ratios prior to digitizing ananalog signal for transmission over adigital carrier system , (b) preventingoverload of succeeding elements of a system, or (c) matching the dynamic ranges of two devices.Signal compression (in dB) may be a linear or nonlinear function of the
signal level across thefrequency band of interest and may be essentially instantaneous or have fixed or variabledelay times.Signal compression always introduces
distortion , which is usually not objectionable, if the compression is limited to a few dB.The original
dynamic range of a compressed signal may be restored by a circuit called an "expander ."ee also
*
Companding
*Dynamic range compression Further reading
[http://www.atis.org/tg2k/_signal_compression.html Definition: signal compression]
[http://users.ece.gatech.edu/~vkm/nii/node36.html Signal Compression]
[http://www.ece.ucsb.edu/scl/ Signal Compression Lab UCSB]
[http://www.stanford.edu/group/compression/ Signal Compression and Classification Group - Stanford]
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