A Mathematical Introduction to Compressive Sensing

Author(s)

    • Foucart, Simon
    • Rauhut, Holger

Bibliographic Information

A Mathematical Introduction to Compressive Sensing

Simon Foucart, Holger Rauhut

(Applied and numerical harmonic analysis / series editor, John J. Benedetto)

Birkhäuser , Springer, c2013

Available at  / 31 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 593-615) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

At the intersection of mathematics, engineering, and computer science sits the thriving field of compressive sensing. Based on the premise that data acquisition and compression can be performed simultaneously, compressive sensing finds applications in imaging, signal processing, and many other domains. In the areas of applied mathematics, electrical engineering, and theoretical computer science, an explosion of research activity has already followed the theoretical results that highlighted the efficiency of the basic principles. The elegant ideas behind these principles are also of independent interest to pure mathematicians. A Mathematical Introduction to Compressive Sensing gives a detailed account of the core theory upon which the field is build. With only moderate prerequisites, it is an excellent textbook for graduate courses in mathematics, engineering, and computer science. It also serves as a reliable resource for practitioners and researchers in these disciplines who want to acquire a careful understanding of the subject. A Mathematical Introduction to Compressive Sensing uses a mathematical perspective to present the core of the theory underlying compressive sensing.

Table of Contents

1 An Invitation to Compressive Sensing.- 2 Sparse Solutions of Underdetermined Systems.- 3 Basic Algorithms.- 4 Basis Pursuit.- 5 Coherence.- 6 Restricted Isometry Property.- 7 Basic Tools from Probability Theory.- 8 Advanced Tools from Probability Theory.- 9 Sparse Recovery with Random Matrices.- 10 Gelfand Widths of l1-Balls.- 11 Instance Optimality and Quotient Property.- 12 Random Sampling in Bounded Orthonormal Systems.- 13 Lossless Expanders in Compressive Sensing.- 14 Recovery of Random Signals using Deterministic Matrices.- 15 Algorithms for l1-Minimization.- Appendix A Matrix Analysis.- Appendix B Convex Analysis.- Appendix C Miscellanea.- List of Symbols.- References

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