How to Add random noise to a signal

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lady bird
lady bird on 20 May 2015
Edited: DGM on 4 Mar 2023
hello all
please can ou help me out adding a noise signal to my system.
i tried adding a sinus function , but i would like to add a random noise signal rather than the sinus function. I'm running simulation from 1 to 3000
if k>1000 & k<2000
dk(k)=sin(12*k*pi*ts);
x=A*x+B*u(k)+B*dk(k);
else
dk(k)=0;
x=A*x+B*u(k);
end
Thank you so much
Best regards
  2 Comments
chris matthew
chris matthew on 14 Mar 2020
Moved: DGM on 4 Mar 2023
how to add noise to audio not for signal
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 14 Mar 2020
Moved: DGM on 4 Mar 2023
What does that mean? Audio IS a signal. You can't add noise to audio without adding it to the signal that defines the audio waveform.

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Answers (6)

Thorsten
Thorsten on 20 May 2015
x = linspace(-2*pi, 2*pi);
plot(sin(x) + 0.5*rand(size(x)))
  5 Comments
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 12 Feb 2020
Tuhin, you can have the amplitude vary with the signal amplitude if you want. For example
% Create noise-only signal.
noisy_signal = rand(size(noise_free_signal));
% Create an amplitude for that noise that is 10% of the noise-free signal at every element.
amplitude = 0.1 * noise_free_signal;
% Now add the noise-only signal to your original noise-free signal to create a noisy signal.
% Be sure to use .*, not *, so that you do element-by-element multiplication.
noisy_signal = noise_free_signal + amplitude .* rand(size(noise_free_signal));
% Adjust amplitude to control the amount of noise.
Now the noise - the max possible noise amplitude - will vary according to the noise-free signal amplitude. Of course since it's noise, the noise won't always be the max possible, it will be less, but it could potentially get that high.
Tuhin Choudhury
Tuhin Choudhury on 16 Mar 2020
Edited: Tuhin Choudhury on 16 Mar 2020
Hi,
Thanks. This would be more of a flexible scaling of the noise w.r.t the input signal.
BR- Tuhin

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 20 May 2015
So just use rand() instead of sin().
  4 Comments
Prajakta Yeola
Prajakta Yeola on 29 Oct 2017
Can we use the same code if audio signal is .wav file? i.e. if x is a .wav file
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 29 Oct 2017
Sure, just figure out the amplitude and add it
yNoisy = yOriginal + amplitude * rand(1, length(yOriginal));

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KL
KL on 20 May 2015
Did you check the gaussian noise function?
  2 Comments
lady bird
lady bird on 20 May 2015
i found a awgn function but i dont know how to use it in my case?
KL
KL on 20 May 2015
There's a difference between wgn() and awgn(). With the latter, you add noise throughout the whole range. I understand you want to add noise between certain time intervals. So in this case, I would suggest to use wgn(). At the moment I do not have the toolbox to use this function. Anyhow you shall use this function to calculate the noiseSignal variable according to @Image Analyst's code.

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Aparna Gupta
Aparna Gupta on 21 Jun 2017
Can anyone please help me with the code to add awgn noise to an eeg signal,which i have taken from a database and the file is of .mat type?
  1 Comment
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 21 Jun 2017
Yes, probably. You can post the code in a new question.

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Mohammad Sohail Khan
Mohammad Sohail Khan on 3 Nov 2017
Edited: DGM on 4 Mar 2023
t = 0:pi/100:40;
x = cos(pi/10*t)+0.5*randn(size(t));
plot(t,x)
Then you know where pi/2, 3pi/4 etc are.

Adewale Obaro
Adewale Obaro on 24 Sep 2018
Edited: DGM on 4 Mar 2023
N = 1000;
t = 0:1/N:2;
x = sin(2*pi*5*t);
Noise = x + randn(1,N)';
plot(t,Noise);
title('Noise in the Amplitude interval (0,0,1,0)');
ylabel('Amplitude [m]')
xlabel('Time [s]')

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