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  2. Zero-order hold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-order_hold

    The zero-order hold (ZOH) is a mathematical model of the practical signal reconstruction done by a conventional digital-to-analog converter (DAC). [1] That is, it describes the effect of converting a discrete-time signal to a continuous-time signal by holding each sample value for one sample interval. It has several applications in electrical ...

  3. Sample-rate conversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sample-rate_conversion

    Commonly used are: zero-order hold (for film/video frames), cubic (for image processing) and windowed sinc function (for audio). The two methods are mathematically identical: picking an interpolation function in the second scheme is equivalent to picking the impulse response of the filter in the first scheme.

  4. First-order hold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-order_hold

    This kind of piecewise linear reconstruction is physically realizable by implementing a digital filter of gain H(z) = 1 − z −1, applying the output of that digital filter (which is simply x[n]−x[n−1]) to an ideal conventional digital-to-analog converter (that has an inherent zero-order hold as its model) and applying that DAC output to ...

  5. Talk:Zero-order hold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Zero-order_hold

    The Zero-order hold (ZOH) is a mathematical model of the practical reconstruction of sampled signals done by conventional digital-to-analog converters (DAC). When a signal, x(t), is sampled at intervals of length T, we are left with just the discrete sequence : x(nT), for integer values of n.

  6. Reconstruction filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reconstruction_filter

    Both idealized Dirac pulses, zero-order held steps and other output pulses, if unfiltered, would contain spurious high-frequency replicas, "or images" of the original bandlimited signal. Thus, the reconstruction filter smooths the waveform to remove image frequencies (copies) above the Nyquist limit. In doing so, it reconstructs the continuous ...

  7. Discretization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discretization

    This process is usually carried out as a first step toward making them suitable for numerical evaluation and implementation on digital computers. Dichotomization is the special case of discretization in which the number of discrete classes is 2, which can approximate a continuous variable as a binary variable (creating a dichotomy for modeling ...

  8. Smoothstep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoothstep

    With n = 1, the slopes or first derivatives of the smoothstep are equal to zero at the left and right edge (x = 0 and x = 1), where the curve is appended to the constant or saturated levels. With higher integer n , the second and higher derivatives are zero at the edges, making the polynomial functions as flat as possible and the splice to the ...

  9. Polynomial interpolation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynomial_interpolation

    Hermite interpolation problems are those where not only the values of the polynomial p at the nodes are given, but also all derivatives up to a given order. This turns out to be equivalent to a system of simultaneous polynomial congruences, and may be solved by means of the Chinese remainder theorem for polynomials.