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This book describes how a key signal/image processing algorithm ¿ that of the fast Hartley transform (FHT) or, via a simple conversion routine between their outputs, of the real¿data version of the ubiquitous fast Fourier transform (FFT) ¿ might best be formulated to facilitate computationally-efficient solutions. The author discusses this for both 1-D (such as required, for example, for the spectrum analysis of audio signals) and m¿D (such as required, for example, for the compression of noisy 2-D images or the watermarking of 3-D video signals) cases, but requiring few computing resources (i.e. low arithmetic/memory/power requirements, etc.). This is particularly relevant for those application areas, such as mobile communications, where the available silicon resources (as well as the battery-life) are expected to be limited. The aim of this monograph, where silicon¿based computing technology and a resource¿constrained environment is assumed and the data is real-valued in nature, has thus been to seek solutions that best match the actual problem needing to be solved.
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