Title :
Why hands-on and why real signals?
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng., Reading Univ., UK
Abstract :
Digital signal processing (DSP) has been taught at the University of Reading since 1987 to all second year undergraduates in electronic engineering. The teaching includes hands-on laboratory work using an audio-band DSP system built around a Texas Instruments TMS320C25 digital signal processor. Analogue input and output signals are used, digitised to 10-bits at a sample rate of up to 48 kHz. Some anecdotal evidence is given to support the author´s belief that hands-on experience of DSP with real signals and real instruments is an essential part of any undergraduate course or series of courses in DSP. A further aspect of DSP teaching with real signals and instruments is the opportunity it provides to develop students´ general skills in electronics laboratory work. The rest of the paper presents a brief overview of the laboratory work run at the University of Reading followed by a discussion of specific aspects of the teaching which seem to be of benefit to students, including demonstration of aliasing and quantization noise, the effects of anti-alias and signal recovery filters and the manner in which transversal filter coefficients are loaded into the DSP system
Keywords :
antialiasing; digital circuits; digital filters; educational courses; electronic engineering education; quantisation (signal); signal reconstruction; signal sampling; Texas Instruments TMS320C25 digital signal processor; University of Reading; aliasing; antialias filters; audio-band DSP system; digital signal processing; electronic engineering; hands-on experience; quantization noise; signal recovery filters; teaching; transversal filter coefficients; undergraduate course;
Conference_Titel :
Teaching of Digital Signal Processing, IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location :
London
DOI :
10.1049/ic:19950205