As of August 2020 the site you are on (wiki.newae.com) is deprecated, and content is now at rtfm.newae.com. |
Difference between revisions of "Sum of Absolute Difference (SAD) Pre-Processing"
(Tag: VisualEditor) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
[[File:Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 1.54.09 PM.png|1100px]] | [[File:Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 1.54.09 PM.png|1100px]] | ||
− | Next, you will need to select the "Input Window", which is the range in the other traces that the tool will try to match with the reference window by shifting it until the SAD is reduced. The ideal value for this field can be determined by adding more traces to the plot and checking if the selected trace shape in the "Reference Points" interval | + | Next, you will need to select the "Input Window", which is the range in the other traces that the tool will try to match with the reference window by shifting it until the SAD is reduced. The ideal value for this field can be determined by adding more traces to the plot and checking if the selected trace shape in the "Reference Points" interval, for the the Ref. trace (red in the example above), fit in this range for all other traces after shifting. |
[[File:Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 1.55.57 PM.png|1100px]] | [[File:Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 1.55.57 PM.png|1100px]] |
Latest revision as of 10:31, 13 July 2016
This module, also known as Sum of Absolute Difference (SAD), is used to re-synchronize traces as in the case of signals with time jitter.
The easiest way to detect the presence of jitter is by zooming in the plot to check if they are not aligned (you may need to select about 8 or more traces to be plotted simultaneously in the "Trace Output Plot" settings in order to visualize it):
If it is the case, go to the "Attack Script Generator" tab and select "Resync: Sum-of-Difference" as the Module #0.
Switch to the "Preprocessing" tab and Select a point range as "Reference Points". It can be performed by manually inserting the values in the corresponding field or by clicking in the adjacent button and selecting the area directly in the plot by dragging the vertical lines. The best range is usually located around a "unique" point sequence in the plot (that can be easily distinguished from its neighbours), as the case of peaks.
Next, you will need to select the "Input Window", which is the range in the other traces that the tool will try to match with the reference window by shifting it until the SAD is reduced. The ideal value for this field can be determined by adding more traces to the plot and checking if the selected trace shape in the "Reference Points" interval, for the the Ref. trace (red in the example above), fit in this range for all other traces after shifting.
Click "Enable" and watch the tool fix all the traces automagically.