>On 11 Apr 2004 19:49:47 -0700, kroger@princeton.edu (Jim Kroger)
>wrote:
>
>>I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
>>edition.
>>
>>I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
>>experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
>>customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
>>may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
>>Transforms.
>>
>>Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
>>already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
>>appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
>>similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
>>
>>
>>Thanks,
>>Jim
>
>Hi Jim,
>
> Darn! I'm afraid I can't recommend any
>"wavelets" book that I know will help you.
>
>I haven't been forced to learn wavelet theory,
>so I haven't done so. In that past, when I
>ran across some "wavelet" material, it's always
>been so mathematical that I don't bother to
>read it.
>
>Years ago my publisher asked me to take a look
>at the first chapter of a manuscript
>for a book on wavelets. The manuscript was
>written in the standard fashion. The first half
>dozen pages were all equations and interesting
>(undefined) phrases like "admissability conditions",
>"dilation variables, "square integrable functions",
>"scalograms", etc.
>
>After reading a page, I could not tell you what I read.
>I didn't know what it was that the author was
>trying to tell the reader (me).
Haha. About the extent of my experience with Wavelets ( and analogous
to my first semester of calculus physics! ). Gathered there must be
something of practical use buried in all that, but figured it needed a
little more time to flush it out.
Regards,
Robert
www.gldsp.com
( modify address for return email )
www.numbersusa.com
www.americanpatrol.com
Reply by Ray Andraka●April 12, 20042004-04-12
I'll second Maurice's recommendation. It is the book that gave enough info to finally understand wavelets, at
least on a basic level. I found Amara's wavelet website too confusing for someone with no background in
wavelets (it may have since improved, I was looking at wavelets around 1995).
Maurice Givens wrote:
> In my opinion, the best book for an engineering understanding of
> wavelets and their foundation is Gil Strang's and Truong Nguyen's book
> "Wavelets and Filter Banks"
>
> Maurice Givens
--
--Ray Andraka, P.E.
President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc.
401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950
email ray@andraka.com
http://www.andraka.com
"They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little
temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
-Benjamin Franklin, 1759
Reply by Al Clark●April 12, 20042004-04-12
maurice.givens@ieee.org (Maurice Givens) wrote in
news:eb93cce8.0404120557.3fdccfd3@posting.google.com:
> kroger@princeton.edu (Jim Kroger) wrote in message
> news:<6dcb1c5e.0404111849.623dbdd0@posting.google.com>...
>> I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
>> edition.
>>
>> I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
>> experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
>> customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
>> may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
>> Transforms.
>>
>> Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
>> already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
>> appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
>> similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Jim
>
>
> In my opinion, the best book for an engineering understanding of
> wavelets and their foundation is Gil Strang's and Truong Nguyen's book
> "Wavelets and Filter Banks"
>
>
> Maurice Givens
>
Strang & Truong used to give a 1 week course on Wavelets that was not too
expensive. I took their course a few years ago and it was well presented.
I agree with Maurice that their book is good.
--
Al Clark
Danville Signal Processing, Inc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
comp.dsp conference July 28 - Aug 1, 2004
details at http://www.danvillesignal.com/index.php?id=compdsp
email: compdsp@danvillesignal.com
Who says you can't teach an old dog a new DSP trick?
Reply by Maurice Givens●April 12, 20042004-04-12
kroger@princeton.edu (Jim Kroger) wrote in message news:<6dcb1c5e.0404111849.623dbdd0@posting.google.com>...
> I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
> edition.
>
> I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
> experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
> customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
> may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
> Transforms.
>
> Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
> already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
> appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
> similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
>
>
> Thanks,
> Jim
In my opinion, the best book for an engineering understanding of
wavelets and their foundation is Gil Strang's and Truong Nguyen's book
"Wavelets and Filter Banks"
Maurice Givens
Reply by Rick Lyons●April 12, 20042004-04-12
On 11 Apr 2004 19:49:47 -0700, kroger@princeton.edu (Jim Kroger)
wrote:
>I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
>edition.
>
>I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
>experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
>customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
>may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
>Transforms.
>
>Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
>already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
>appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
>similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
>
>
>Thanks,
>Jim
Hi Jim,
Darn! I'm afraid I can't recommend any
"wavelets" book that I know will help you.
I haven't been forced to learn wavelet theory,
so I haven't done so. In that past, when I
ran across some "wavelet" material, it's always
been so mathematical that I don't bother to
read it.
Years ago my publisher asked me to take a look
at the first chapter of a manuscript
for a book on wavelets. The manuscript was
written in the standard fashion. The first half
dozen pages were all equations and interesting
(undefined) phrases like "admissability conditions",
"dilation variables, "square integrable functions",
"scalograms", etc.
After reading a page, I could not tell you what I read.
I didn't know what it was that the author was
trying to tell the reader (me).
I returned the hardcopy to the publisher with a note that
said something like, "I did my best to read this chapter
but, try as I might, I cannot understand a single thing
on the first four pages of this material. I regret to
say that I have no idea what the author was trying to
tell me." My guess is that the manuscript was a
translation from a foreign language. By the way,
the manuscript was published.
That was my only experience with wavelets. :-)
Hey Jim,
you might check out:
http://users.rowan.edu/~polikar/WAVELETS/WTtutorial.htmlhttp://www.xilinx.com/products/logicore/dsp/fft_to_wavelet.pdfhttp://perso.wanadoo.fr/polyvalens/clemens/wavelets/wavelets.htmlhttp://www.ecs.syr.edu/faculty/lewalle/tutor/tutor.htmlhttp://www.bearcave.com/misl/misl_tech/wavelets/haar.htmlhttp://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/CCRMA/Courses/420:1998/lectures/lecture10.pdf
Good Luck,
[-Rick-]
Reply by Jerry Avins●April 12, 20042004-04-12
Jim Kroger wrote:
> I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
> edition.
>
> I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
> experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
> customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
> may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
> Transforms.
>
> Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
> already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
> appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
> similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
>
>
> Thanks,
> Jim
Rick can answer his own mail, I'm sure, and he'll do it far better than
I can. Until you hear from him, have a look at Amara's Wavelet Page,
http://www.amara.com/current/wavelet.html. In general, there are good
resources at http://mathforum.org/library/view/16414.html.
Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.
�����������������������������������������������������������������������
Reply by Jim Kroger●April 11, 20042004-04-11
I'm happy to find out about your book, and just ordered the second
edition.
I discovered it during a quest to understand wavelets (I have no
experience with signal processing but need it now). From the 42
customer reviews at Amazon it's clear you've written something that
may help me understand some foundations for wavelets such as Fourier
Transforms.
Since you apparently have a rapport with the reader who doesn't
already understand the material or foundations, perhaps you have an
appreciation of which of the available wavelet texts may take a
similar approach. Is there one that you would recommend?
Thanks,
Jim