Why is noise required to get expected Magnitude Squared Coherence (mscohere)
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Jerry Gregoire
le 23 Mar 2015
Modifié(e) : Jerry Gregoire
le 24 Mar 2015
Hi all,
I am missing something with magnitude Squared Coherence and/or its algorithm. If two signals are compared without or with little noise I get unexpected results. As an example taking from the ML help page:
Fs = 1000; t = 0:1/Fs:1-1/Fs;
x = cos(2*pi*100*t)+sin(2*pi*200*t)+0.5*randn(size(t)); y = 0.5*cos(2*pi*100*t-pi/4)+0.35*sin(2*pi*200*t-pi/2)+ ... 0.5*randn(size(t)); [Pxy,F] = mscohere(x,y,hamming(100),80,100,Fs);
gives the expected two peak response. I would have thought that with no noise the mscohere would be similar and even stronger but it is not. Run the same code without the noise
x = cos(2*pi*100*t)+sin(2*pi*200*t); y = 0.5*cos(2*pi*100*t-pi/4)+0.35*sin(2*pi*200*t-pi/2);
[Pxy,F] = mscohere(x,y,hamming(100),80,100,Fs);
and rather than getting two strong peaks and the rest near or at zero, you get unity for all frequencies.
You don't need much noise, 0.5% or -46dB will do. Below this and the results get real funky.
Furthermore, without some noise the algorithm sees harmonics very strongly even though they are not in both signals:
x = cos(2*pi*100*t)+sin(2*pi*200*t)+0.5*randn(size(t)); y = 0.5*cos(2*pi*100*t-pi/4);
still gives two strong peaks at 100 and 200 unless y has noise. Then all is as expected.
Why is this?
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Greg Dionne
le 23 Mar 2015
Modifié(e) : Greg Dionne
le 23 Mar 2015
You might be thinking of CPSD instead of MSCOHERE. MSCOHERE will normalize CPSD by the PSD of each signal (i.e. Cxy = (abs(Pxy).^2)./(Pxx.*Pyy), where Pxy is the CPSD. When the spectrum of Pxy, Pxx and Pyy are very near zero, you'll be looking at division of two numbers very close to zero. Adding the noise decouples them somewhat.
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