idwt {wavelets} | R Documentation |
Inverse Discrete Wavelet Transform
Description
Computes the inverse discrete wavelet transform for a discrete wavelet transform that was obtained from a univariate or multivariate time series.
Usage
idwt(wt, fast=TRUE)
Arguments
wt |
A |
fast |
A logical flag which, if true, indicates that the inverse pyramid algorithm is computed with an internal C function. Otherwise, only R code is used in all computations. |
Details
The inverse discrete wavelet transform is computed via the inverse pyramid algorithm, using pseudocode written by Percival and Walden (2000), p. 101.
Value
An object with class and attributes equivalent to the original
series that was used to compute the DWT. In general, the output will
be equivalent to the original series (i.e. X = idwt(dwt(X))), however
when thresholding or shrinkage methods are used on the dwt
object, the output of idwt
may differ from the original series.
Author(s)
Eric Aldrich. ealdrich@gmail.com.
References
Percival, D. B. and A. T. Walden (2000) Wavelet Methods for Time Series Analysis, Cambridge University Press.
See Also
Examples
# obtain the two series listed in Percival and Walden (2000), page 42
X1 <- c(.2,-.4,-.6,-.5,-.8,-.4,-.9,0,-.2,.1,-.1,.1,.7,.9,0,.3)
X2 <- c(.2,-.4,-.6,-.5,-.8,-.4,-.9,0,-.2,.1,-.1,.1,-.7,.9,0,.3)
# combine them and compute DWT
newX <- cbind(X1,X2)
wt <- dwt(newX, n.levels=3, boundary="reflection")
# compute the inverse DWT
invX <- idwt(wt)
# compare
newX
invX