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Multiresolution Signal Cross-correlation (open access)

Multiresolution Signal Cross-correlation

Signal Correlation is a digital signal processing technique which has a wide variety of applications, ranging from geophysical exploration to acoustic signal enhancements, or beamforming. This dissertation will consider this technique in an underwater acoustics perspective, but the algorithms illustrated here can be readily applied to other areas. Although beamforming techniques have been studied for the past fifty years, modern beamforming systems still have difficulty in operating in noisy environments, especially in shallow water.
Date: December 1994
Creator: Novaes, Marcos (Marcos Nogueira)
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Real-Time Merging-Buffering Technique for MIDI Messages (open access)

A Real-Time Merging-Buffering Technique for MIDI Messages

A powerful and efficient algorithm has been designed to deal with the critical timing problem of the MIDI messages. This algorithm can convert note events stored in a natural way to MIDI messages dynamically. Only limited memory space (the buffer) is required to finish the conversion work, and the size of the buffer is independent of the size of the original sequence (notes). This algorithm's real-time variable properties suggest not only the flexible real-time controls in the use of musical aspects, but also the expandability to interactive multi-media applications. A compositional environment called MusicSculptor has been implemented in terms of this algorithm.
Date: December 1991
Creator: Chang, Kuo-Lung
System: The UNT Digital Library
Macro Control Structures for Structured Programming in ALC (open access)

Macro Control Structures for Structured Programming in ALC

This thesis describes a set of computer program control structures which permits the application of certain structured programming techniques to the IBM/360 assembly language (ALC). The control structures are implemented by programmerdefined instructions known as macros. A history of computer software is presented, providing a basis for the emergence of structured programming. A survey of the major concepts of structured programming with special attention to control structures and their significance to structured programming follows. The macros developed in this study include DO, ENDDO, LEAVE, CASE, and ENDCASE. They provide a looping control structure, a loop-escape construct, and a selective control structure. Examples of usage are given.
Date: December 1975
Creator: Connally, Kim G.
System: The UNT Digital Library