Finding Time Intervals with corresponding data

3 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
RobB
RobB le 8 Juin 2015
Commenté : dpb le 8 Juin 2015
I have a set of data vs. time. For simplicity, let's say at I have data recorded anywhere between once per second and 4 or 5 times per second, and each time has a corresponding value of either 1, or 0. I discard all of the entries with a value 0. How can I easily tell how much time has passed with a value of 1, and what the intervals of the time is where the corresponding value is 1. Thank you.
  2 commentaires
dpb
dpb le 8 Juin 2015
Well, unless there's something unsaid, you can't. All you've told us is there's some indicator variable but nothing about what that might indicate (if anything) re: actual clock time and you've implied that the sample rate isn't fixed hence just how many intervals it's been between is also no actual information.
RobB
RobB le 8 Juin 2015
To make it more clear...1 means the switch is on, 0 means the switch is off. For the time values, I have exact values, but the sample rate can range between .8 seconds and 1.2 seconds, so not exactly every 1 second. Does that help at all? If I could find the beginning value and ending value of each time interval the switch is on (value of 1) I could just find the difference.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponse acceptée

dpb
dpb le 8 Juin 2015
_"1 means the switch is on, 0 means the switch is off. ... If I could find the beginning value and ending value of each time interval the switch is on..."
istart=find([0 diff(s)]==1); % Switch 'on' from 'off' locations
iend=find([0 diff(s)]==-1); % Switch 'off' from 'on'
s is you switch indicator variable; use whatever variable/column you have for it...
  3 commentaires
Star Strider
Star Strider le 8 Juin 2015
I’m responding here rather than to your Comment to my previous Answer.
That’s because dpb assumes your vector is a row vector. For your column vector, change the vector in the find argument to:
[0; diff(s)]
Note the semicolon (;). It will do a vertical concatenation rather than a horizontal concatenation (that uses either a comma (,) or a space delimiter).
dpb
dpb le 8 Juin 2015
Ah, yeah, I probably should've presumed it would be a column...

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (0)

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Logical dans Help Center et File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by