Consider chirped audio signals. Their frequency is a monotonic function of time. There are signals characterized by a down-chirp, like that of a bat using its sonar echolocation ability to track its prey.
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Here
Recall that the constant
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However, there are also other families characterized by other
parameter values. Consider another set of wave packets whose phase
space cells have dimension
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What is the representation of the given chirp signal with respect to this new basis? The answer is based on the transformation formula
It is worth while to do the calculation explicitly because the answer turns out to be fairly simple and informative. The simplicity starts to become evident when one splits the chirped signal into odd and even labelled terms. Assuming without loss of generality that the number of terms is even,
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and
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Compare the two representations, Eq.(2.74) and
Eq.(2.75), of the chirped signal. In
Eq.(2.74)
is represented by a set of
basis vectors (in physics and engineering also known as
``degrees of freedom''),
Is the choice of basis vectors arbitrary? The principle of unit-economy21applied to this example demands that one pick the wave packet basis Eq.(2.76), whose coefficients in Eq.(2.73) express the essential properties of the degrees of freedom of the chirped signal. One should not pick the other basis, Eq.(2.77), whose amplitudes in Eq.(2.75) are nonessential because specifying them might lead to signals which are not chirped at all.
The mathematical implementation of the principle of unit-economy to signal processing consists of the requirement that one pick an optimal basis to represent the set of signals under consideration. This means that one pick a subspace of minimal dimension in order to accomodate these signals.
The principle of unit economy is implemented by a process of conceptualization, which is a method of expanding man's consciousness by reducing the number of its content's units - a systematic means to an unlimited integration of cognitive data.
The principle of unit-economy forbids the formation of a new concept if that formation is based on some nonessential property.
The principle of unit-economy is a statement not only about the structure of mathematics, but also more generally about why one forms concepts in the first place, be they first-order concepts based on perceptual data (``percepts''), or be they higher-level concepts based on already-formed concepts.
The principle of unit-economy is a guiding principle that leads us from an unlimited number of specific units (i.e. members of a class, in our example, signals characterized by a chirp) to a single new concept (in mathematics also known as an ``equivalence class'', in our example, the concept ``chirped signal''). By repeatedly applying this principle to percepts, as well as to the product of such applications, one can reduce a vast amount of information to a minimal number of units. These one's consciousness can readily keep in the forefront of one's mind, digest them, assimilate them, manipulate them, and use them without any danger of information overload.