convolve {stats} | R Documentation |
Use the Fast Fourier Transform to compute the several kinds of convolutions of two sequences.
convolve(x, y, conj = TRUE, type = c("circular", "open", "filter"))
x,y |
numeric sequences of the same length to be convolved. |
conj |
logical; if |
type |
character; one of For |
The Fast Fourier Transform, fft
, is used for efficiency.
The input sequences x
and y
must have the same length if
circular
is true.
Note that the usual definition of convolution of two sequences
x
and y
is given by convolve(x, rev(y), type = "o")
.
If r <- convolve(x,y, type = "open")
and n <- length(x)
, m <- length(y)
, then
r[k] = sum(i; x[k-m+i] * y[i])
where the sum is over all valid indices i, for k = 1, …, n+m-1.
If type == "circular"
, n = m is required, and the above is
true for i , k = 1,…,n when
x[j] := x[n+j] for j < 1.
Brillinger, D. R. (1981) Time Series: Data Analysis and Theory, Second Edition. San Francisco: Holden-Day.
fft
, nextn
, and particularly
filter
(from the stats package) which may be
more appropriate.
require(graphics) x <- c(0,0,0,100,0,0,0) y <- c(0,0,1, 2 ,1,0,0)/4 zapsmall(convolve(x,y)) # *NOT* what you first thought. zapsmall(convolve(x, y[3:5], type="f")) # rather x <- rnorm(50) y <- rnorm(50) # Circular convolution *has* this symmetry: all.equal(convolve(x,y, conj = FALSE), rev(convolve(rev(y),x))) n <- length(x <- -20:24) y <- (x-10)^2/1000 + rnorm(x)/8 Han <- function(y) # Hanning convolve(y, c(1,2,1)/4, type = "filter") plot(x,y, main="Using convolve(.) for Hanning filters") lines(x[-c(1 , n) ], Han(y), col="red") lines(x[-c(1:2, (n-1):n)], Han(Han(y)), lwd=2, col="dark blue")