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Transformada Empírica de Ondaletas×Transformada Discreta de Wavelet×
ÁreaSéries temporaisSéries temporais
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem20131992
Autor originalJérémie GillesIngrid Daubechies
TipoNon-stationary signal decompositionHierarchical signal decomposition
Fonte seminalGilles, J. (2013). Empirical wavelet transform. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 61(16), 3999–4010. DOI ↗Daubechies, I. (1992). Ten Lectures on Wavelets. SIAM. DOI ↗
Outros nomesEWT, Empirical waveletsDWT, Daubechies wavelets, Haar wavelet
Relacionados31
ResumoThe empirical wavelet transform (EWT) is a data-driven wavelet decomposition method that automatically defines wavelet bases adapted to the frequency content of the signal. Introduced by Jérémie Gilles (2013), it overcomes a key limitation of classical wavelets—which use fixed, predefined bases—by constructing custom wavelets from the signal's own spectrum. This adaptive approach is particularly effective for analyzing non-stationary signals with complex, multi-component structures.The discrete wavelet transform (DWT) is a fast, computationally efficient method for decomposing signals into different frequency and time components using orthogonal or biorthogonal wavelet functions. Developed rigorously by Ingrid Daubechies (1992) and built on Mallat's multiresolution decomposition theory (1989), the DWT employs filter banks to recursively split a signal into approximation (low-frequency) and detail (high-frequency) components. It has become the foundation for signal processing applications ranging from compression to feature extraction.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Empirical Wavelet Transform · Discrete Wavelet Transform. Recuperado em 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare