Make eBroadcast my Homepage | Contact Us   Return To The Main eBroadcast Homepage
Australia
Web Guide Search
Australia
Welcome It's
Australia
Australia
Web Guide: Encyclopedia
EBroadcast Australia
Powered by Wikipedia
Contents

Quantization

Quantization is the property of being constrained to a set of discrete values, rather than varying continuously.

Quantisation (in digital signal processing) refers to the process of approximating a continuous signal by a set of discrete symbols or integer values. In general, a quantization operator can be represented as

Q(x) = round(f(x))

where x is a real number, Q(x) an integer, and f(x) is an arbitrary real-valued function that controls the 'quantization law' of the particular coder.

For example, in digital telephony, two popular quantization schemes are the 'A-law' and 'µ-law', each mapping an analog signal to an integer value represented by an 8-bit binary number, but each with a different function f.

See also:


Quantization is also used, in quantum physics to describe the process by which a physical system exhibits quantized behavior, rather than continuous, or 'classical' behavior.


In music software, quantization is the altering of the times and durations of notes so they fit the beat or subbeat perfectly.

Elsewhere
EBroadcast Australia
Search engine
Web directory

CONTENTS:
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

Australia
eBroadcast Australia
Australia © 06 eBroadcast Australia | About eBroadcast | Legal Notices | Privacy Policy | Contact Us    Return To The Main eBroadcast Homepage