Luis Miguel López-Ramos

2papers

2 Papers

LGMar 7, 2022
A Trainable Approach to Zero-delay Smoothing Spline Interpolation

Emilio Ruiz-Moreno, Luis Miguel López-Ramos, Baltasar Beferull-Lozano

The task of reconstructing smooth signals from streamed data in the form of signal samples arises in various applications. This work addresses such a task subject to a zero-delay response; that is, the smooth signal must be reconstructed sequentially as soon as a data sample is available and without having access to subsequent data. State-of-the-art approaches solve this problem by interpolating consecutive data samples using splines. Here, each interpolation step yields a piece that ensures a smooth signal reconstruction while minimizing a cost metric, typically a weighted sum between the squared residual and a derivative-based measure of smoothness. As a result, a zero-delay interpolation is achieved in exchange for an almost certainly higher cumulative cost as compared to interpolating all data samples together. This paper presents a novel approach to further reduce this cumulative cost on average. First, we formulate a zero-delay smoothing spline interpolation problem from a sequential decision-making perspective, allowing us to model the future impact of each interpolated piece on the average cumulative cost. Then, an interpolation method is proposed to exploit the temporal dependencies between the streamed data samples. Our method is assisted by a recurrent neural network and accordingly trained to reduce the accumulated cost on average over a set of example data samples collected from the same signal source generating the signal to be reconstructed. Finally, we present extensive experimental results for synthetic and real data showing how our approach outperforms the abovementioned state-of-the-art.

SPAug 23, 2023
Consistent Signal Reconstruction from Streaming Multivariate Time Series

Emilio Ruiz-Moreno, Luis Miguel López-Ramos, Baltasar Beferull-Lozano

Digitalizing real-world analog signals typically involves sampling in time and discretizing in amplitude. Subsequent signal reconstructions inevitably incur an error that depends on the amplitude resolution and the temporal density of the acquired samples. From an implementation viewpoint, consistent signal reconstruction methods have proven a profitable error-rate decay as the sampling rate increases. Despite that, these results are obtained under offline settings. Therefore, a research gap exists regarding methods for consistent signal reconstruction from data streams. Solving this problem is of great importance because such methods could run at a lower computational cost than the existing offline ones or be used under real-time requirements without losing the benefits of ensuring consistency. In this paper, we formalize for the first time the concept of consistent signal reconstruction from streaming time-series data. Then, we present a signal reconstruction method able to enforce consistency and also exploit the spatiotemporal dependencies of streaming multivariate time-series data to further reduce the signal reconstruction error. Our experiments show that our proposed method achieves a favorable error-rate decay with the sampling rate compared to a similar but non-consistent reconstruction.