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Radar signal processing is a promising tool for vital sign monitoring. For contactless observation of breathing and heart rate a precise measurement of the distance between radar antenna and the patient’s skin is required. This results in the need to detect small movements in the range of 0.5 mm and below. Such small changes in distance are hard to be measured with a limited radar bandwidth when relying on the frequency based range detection alone. In order to enhance the relative distance resolution a precise measurement of the observed signal’s phase is required. Due to radar reflections from surfaces in close proximity to the main area of interest the desired signal of the radar reflection can get superposed. For superposing signals with little separation in frequency domain the main lobes of their discrete Fourier transform (DFT) merge into a single lobe, so that their peaks cannot be differentiated. This paper evaluates a method for reconstructing the phase and amplitude of such superimposed signals.
Abstract: This paper is about detecting the difference between fully-random and semi-random shuffleing data sets, with the use of unsupervised learning algorithms. Because of the limits of the k-means algorithm alone, a recurrent autoencoder is used for feature extraction to improve the results of k-means. In the next step the autoencoder alone is used for clustering.
Introduction: In the last years, machine learning has been used more and more in different areas and it is also appropriate for for pattern recognition in data. Random data is characterized through the missing of defined patterns. Permutations without repetitions have the highest amount of entropy for a sequence of its length, which is similar to random data according to Andrei Kolmogorov, who states that random data have the highest amount of information and can’t be compressed. Therefore, this paper analyses the difference between random permutations and good shuffled permutations, which have some remaining patterns left. This is done via a recurrent autoencoder.