Conditional temporal moment of the time-frequency distribution of a signal
Time-frequency moments provide an efficient way to characterize signals whose frequencies change in time (that is, are nonstationary). Such signals can arise from machinery with degraded or failed hardware. Classical Fourier analysis cannot capture the time-varying frequency behavior. Time-frequency distribution generated by short-time Fourier transform (STFT) or other time-frequency analysis techniques can capture the time-varying behavior, but directly treating these distributions as features carries a high computational burden, and potentially introduces unrelated and undesirable feature characteristics. In contrast, distilling the time-frequency distribution results into low-dimension time-frequency moments provides a method for capturing the essential features of the signal in a much smaller data package. Using these moments significantly reduces the computational burden for feature extraction and comparison — a key benefit for real-time operation [1], [2].
The Predictive Maintenance Toolbox™ implements the three branches of time-frequency moment:
returns
the conditional temporal moment of momentT
= tftmoment(xt
,order
) timetable
xt
as a matrix. The momentT
variables
provide the temporal moments for the orders you specify in
order
. The data in xt
can be
nonuniformly sampled.
returns
the conditional temporal moment of momentT
= tftmoment(x
,ts
,order
) x
sampled at the time
instants specified by ts
in seconds.
If ts
is a scalar
duration
, then
tftmoment
applies it uniformly to all
samples.
If ts
is a vector, then
tftmoment
applies each element to the
corresponding sample in x
. Use this syntax for
nonuniform sampling.
returns
the conditional temporal moment of a signal whose power spectrogram is
momentT
= tftmoment(p
,fp
,tp
,order
) p
. fp
contains the frequencies
corresponding to the temporal estimate contained in p
.
tp
contains the vector of time instants corresponding
to the centers of the windowed segments used to compute short-time power
spectrum estimates. Use this syntax when:
You already have the power spectrogram you want to use.
You want to customize the options for pspectrum
, rather than accept the default
pspectrum
options that
tftmoment
applies. Use
pspectrum
first with the options you want,
and then use the output p
as input for
tftmoment
. This approach also allows you to
plot the power spectrogram.
specifies additional properties using name-value pair arguments. Options include
moment centralization and time-limit specification.momentT
= tftmoment(___,Name,Value
)
You can use Name,Value
with any of the input-argument
combinations in previous syntaxes.
tftmoment(___)
with no output arguments plots
the conditional temporal moment. The plot x-axis is frequency, and the plot
y-axis is the corresponding temporal moment.
You can use this syntax with any of the input-argument combinations in previous syntaxes.
[1] Loughlin, P. J. "What are the time-frequency moments of a signal?" Advanced Signal Processing Algorithms, Architectures, and Implementations XI, SPIE Proceedings. Vol. 4474, November 2001.
[2] Loughlin, P., F. Cakrak, and L. Cohen. "Conditional moment analysis of transients with application to helicopter fault data." Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing. Vol 14, Issue 4, 2000, pp. 511–522.