Digital Signal Processing
Soma Biswas
Department of Electrical Engineering
IISc, Bangalore
Office: C320 (EE)
E-mail: [email protected]
Class Hours: Tuesday and Thursday 3:30pm to 5 pm
Class Room: EE 218
Text Book
1. Proakis and Manolakis, Digital Signal Processing, PHI.
2. AV Oppenheim, RW Schafer, Discrete-time Signal Processing,
Prentice Hall 1998.
Topics: Discrete-time signals and systems, frequency response, group delay,
z-transform, convolution, discrete Fourier transform (DFT), fast Fourier
transform (FFT), discrete Cosine transform (DCT), relationship between DFT
and DCT; design of FIR and IIR filters, finite word length effects, Hilbert
transform, Hilbert transform relations for causal signals, Karhunen-Loeve
transform, Introduction to linear prediction, bandpass sampling theorem,
bandpass signal representation
Digital Signal Processing - Lecture 1
Grading
Assignments 20%
Midterm 30%
Final 50%
Website:
http://www.ee.iisc.ac.in/new/people/faculty/soma.biswas/Course.html
Homework:
There will be homework problem sets with a specific due date and
time.
Homework problems might require computer programming.
Late submission (beyond the due date and time) of homework
solutions is not allowed unless there is a genuine reason.
Digital Signal Processing - Lecture 1
Midterm/Final Exam
Both midterm and final exam will test primarily your
understanding of the material covered in the class.
Exams will be closed book/notes.
No programming exercise will be part of exams.
Note that the course material that is covered in the
midterm exam will also be part of the final exam.
Digital Signal Processing - Lecture 1
Honor Principle
You are welcome to exchange ideas in solving homework
problems with your colleagues
But all the work submitted for grading (homework) must be
your own work (i.e., you must have worked out all details by
yourself)
Copying computer code or files (including the material on
the web) without proper citation is considered as plagiarism.
Digital Signal Processing - Lecture 1