Now available in a three-volume set, this updated and expanded edition of the bestselling The Digital Signal Processing Handbook continues to provide the engineering community with authoritative coverage of the fundamental and specialized aspects of information-bearing signals in digital form. Encompassing essential background material, technical details, standards, and software, the second edition reflects cutting-edge information on signal processing algorithms and protocols related to speech, audio, multimedia, and video processing technology associated with standards ranging from WiMax to MP3 audio, low-power/high-performance DSPs, color image processing, and chips on video. Drawing on the experience of leading engineers, researchers, and scholars, the three-volume set contains 29 new chapters that address multimedia and Internet technologies, tomography, radar systems, architecture, standards, and future applications in speech, acoustics, video, radar, and telecommunications.
This volume, Wireless, Networking, Radar, Sensor Array Processing, and Nonlinear Signal Processing, provides complete coverage of the foundations of signal processing related to wireless, radar, space-time coding, and mobile communications, together with associated applications to networking, storage, and communications.
About the Author: Vijay K. Madisetti is a professor in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. He teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in digital signal processing and computer engineering, and leads a strong research program in digital signal processing, telecommunications, and computer engineering. Dr. Madisetti received his BTech (Hons) in electronics and electrical communications engineering in 1984 from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India, and his PhD in electrical engineering and computer sciences in 1989 from the University of California at Berkeley. He has authored or edited several books in the areas of digital signal processing, computer engineering, and software systems, and has served extensively as a consultant to industry and the government. He is a fellow of the IEEE and received the 2006 Frederick Emmons Terman Medal from the American Society of Engineering Education for his contributions to electrical engineering.