Papers Published
- Carin, L; Liu, D; Xue, Y, In situ compressive sensing,
IEEE Workshop on Statistical Signal Processing Proceedings
(December, 2007),
pp. 322-325, IEEE [doi] .
(last updated on 2024/12/31)Abstract:
Compressive sensing (CS) is a framework that exploits the compressible character of most natural signals, allowing the accurate measurement of an m-dimensional real signal u in terms of n≪m real measurements v. The CS measurements may be represented in terms of an n x m matrix that defines the linear relationship between v and u. In this paper we demonstrate that similar linear mappings of the form u → v are manifested naturally by wave propagation in complex media, and therefore in situ CS measurements may be performed simply by exploiting the complex propagation and scattering properties of natural environments. A similar phenomenon is observed in time-reversal imaging, to which connections are made. In addition to presenting the basic in situ CS framework, a simple but practical example problem is considered. ©2007 IEEE.