Showing posts with label Processing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Processing. Show all posts

Friday, September 25, 2015

Sensors and Low Power Signal Processing [Repost]




Sensors and Low Power Signal Processing by Mohammad Rafiqul Haider


English | Dec. 10, 2009 | ISBN: 0387793917 | 120 Pages | PDF | 7.04 MB




Low-power sensors and their applications in various fields ranging from military to civilian lives have made tremendous progress in the recent years. Low-power and extended battery life are the key focuses for long term, reliable and easy operation of these sensors. Sensors and Low Power Signal Processing provides a general overview of a sensor’s working principle and a discussion of the emerging sensor technologies including chemical, electro-chemical and MEMS based sensors. Also included is a discussion on design challenges associated with low-power analog circuits and the schemes to overcome them. Finally, a short discussion of some of the simple wireless telemetry schemes best suited for low-power sensor applications and sensor packaging issues is discussed. Applications and sensor prototypes included are environmental monitoring, health care monitoring and issues related to the development of sensor prototypes and associated electronics to achieve high signal-to-noise ratio will also be presented.










Monday, September 21, 2015

Biosignal Processing: Principles and Practices (Repost)




Biosignal Processing: Principles and Practices By Hualou Liang, Joseph D. Bronzino, Donald R. Peterson


2013 | 202 Pages | ISBN: 1439871434 | PDF | 28 MB








With the rise of advanced computerized data collection systems, monitoring devices, and instrumentation technologies, large and complex datasets accrue as an inevitable part of biomedical enterprise. The availability of these massive amounts of data offers unprecedented opportunities to advance our understanding of underlying biological and physiological functions, structures, and dynamics.


Biosignal Processing: Principles and Practices provides state-of-the-art coverage of contemporary methods in biosignal processing with an emphasis on brain signal analysis. After introducing the fundamentals, it presents emerging methods for brain signal processing, focusing on specific non-invasive imaging techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIR). In addition, the book presents recent advances, reflecting the evolution of biosignal processing.


As biomedical datasets grow larger and more complicated, the development and use of signal processing methods to analyze and interpret these data has become a matter of course. This book is one step in the development of biosignal analysis and is designed to stimulate new ideas and opportunities in the development of cutting-edge computational methods for biosignal processing.







Thursday, September 17, 2015

The SparkFun Guide to Processing: Create Interactive Art with Code




The SparkFun Guide to Processing: Create Interactive Art with Code by Derek Runberg


English | 6 Sept. 2015 | ISBN: 1593276125 | 312 Pages | EPUB/MOBI/PDF (True) | 67.58 MB




Processing is a free, beginner-friendly programming language designed to help non-programmers create interactive art with code.




The SparkFun Guide to Processing, the first in the SparkFun Electronics series, will show you how to craft digital artwork and even combine that artwork with hardware so that it reacts to the world around you. Start with the basics of programming and animation as you draw colorful shapes and make them bounce around the screen. Then move on to a series of hands-on, step-by-step projects that will show you how to:




Make detailed pixel art and scale it to epic proportions


Write a maze game and build a MaKey MaKey controller with fruit buttons


Play, record, and sample audio to create your own soundboard


Fetch weather data from the Web and build a custom weather dashboard


Create visualizations that change based on sound, light, and temperature readings


With a little imagination and Processing as your paintbrush, you"ll be on your way to coding your own gallery of digital art in no time! Put on your artist"s hat, and begin your DIY journey by learning some basic programming and making your first masterpiece with The SparkFun Guide to Processing.