Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 2

EC 308 COURSE SYLLABUS

Advanced Digital Signal Processing


Instructor: Dr. Anil Kumar
Assistant Professor
Department of Electronic & Communication Engineering
PDPM Indian Institute of Information Technology Design
and Manufacturing Jabalpur
Dumna Airport Road, Jabalpur- 482005, MP, India
Phone: +91-9425805412, Fax: +91-761-2632524
E-mail: anilkdee@gmail.com, anilk@iiitdmj.ac.in

Course Description:
Module1: Introduction
Classification of systems: Continuous, discrete, linear, causal, stable, dynamic, recursive,
time variance; classification of signals: continuous and discrete, energy and power;
mathematical representation of signals; spectral density; sampling techniques, Nyquist
rate, aliasing effect.
Module2: Discrete time system Analysis
Z-transform and its properties, inverse z-transforms; difference equation Solution by ztransform, application to discrete systems - Stability analysis, frequency response
convolution Fourier transform of discrete sequence Discrete Fourier series.
Module3: Discrete Fourier Transform and Computation
DFT properties, magnitude and phase representation - Computation of DFT using FFT
algorithm DIT & DIF FFT using radix 2-Butterfly structure.
Module 4: Realization of Digital Filters
FIR & IIR filter realization: Direct form-I, direct form-II, and Parallel & cascade forms.
Module 5: Design of Digital Filters
FIR design: Windowing Techniques Need and choice of windows Linear phase
characteristics. IIR design: Analog filter design - Butterworth and Chebyshev
approximations; digital design using impulse invariant and bilinear transformation Warping, prewarping - Frequency transformation.
Module 6:
Finite word length effects in FIR and IIR digital filters: Quantization, round off errors
and overflow errors. Overview of DSP processors
Text Books:
1. John G.Proakis, Dimitris G.Manobakis, Digital Signal Processing, Principles,
Algorithms and Applications, Third edition, (2000) PHI

2. Emmanuel C Ifeachor, Barrie W Jrevis, Digital Signal Processing, Pearson


Education.

References:
1. S. K. Mitra, Digital Signal Processing: A Computer Based Approach. Tata
McGraw Hill. McGraw Hill, 2006.
2. P. P. Vaidyanathan. Multirate systems and filter banks. Prentice Hall. PTR. 1993.
3. A. V. Oppenheim and R. W. Sehafer, Discrete Time Signal Processing, Prentice
Hall (1989).
Evaluation Method:
Quiz test I: 12.5 %
Mid SEM: 25%
Quiz test II: 12.5%
Final Exam: 50%
Grade Assessment:
95 A+ 100 Outstanding
90 A < 95
80 B+ < 90
70 B < 80
60 C+ < 70
50 C < 60
40 D+ < 50
35 D < 40
0 F < 35 Fail

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi