Regime Change: Bit-Depth versus Measurement-Rate in Compressive Sensing

TitleRegime Change: Bit-Depth versus Measurement-Rate in Compressive Sensing
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsJ. N. Laska, and R. G. Baraniuk
Refereed DesignationRefereed
Abstract

The recently introduced \emph{compressive sensing} (CS) framework enables digital signal acquisition systems to take advantage of signal structures beyond bandlimitedness. Indeed, the number of CS measurements required for stable reconstruction is closer to the order of the signal complexity than the Nyquist rate. To date, the CS theory has focused on real-valued measurements, but in practice, measurements are mapped to bits from a finite alphabet. Moreover, in many potential applications the total number of measurement bits is constrained, which suggests a tradeoff between the number of measurements and the number of bits per measurement. We study this situation in this paper and show that there exist two distinct regimes of operation that correspond to high/low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In the \emph{measurement compression} (MC) regime, a high SNR favors acquiring fewer measurements with more bits per measurement; in the \emph{quantization compression} (QC) regime, a low SNR favors acquiring more measurements with fewer bits per measurement. A surprise from our analysis and experiments is that in many practical applications it is better to operate in the QC regime, even acquiring as few as 1 bit per measurement.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the
grants NSF CCF-0431150, CCF-0728867, CCF-0926127, CNS-0435425, and
CNS-0520280, DARPA/ONR N66001-08-1-2065, N66001-11-1-4090, ONR N00014-07-1-0936,
N00014-08-1-1067, N00014-08-1-1112, and N00014-08-1-1066, AFOSR
FA9550-07-1-0301 and FA9550-09-1-0432, ARO MURI W911NF-07-1-0185
and W911NF-09-1-0383, and the Texas Instruments Leadership
University Program.

Year of PublicationSubmitted
MonthOct.
Journal2011
Publication File: 

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