Function aproximation with exp functions

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Dominik Vana
Dominik Vana on 22 Dec 2019
Commented: J. Alex Lee on 23 Dec 2019
Hello,
I am working on my master thesis. My supervisor wants me to do aproximation of fuctions on pictures below without using polyfit. He wants to find simplest fuctions possible. I think fuctions are some kind of exponential functions.
Is there anybody who has experiences with these functions?
Thank you.
DV
On these pictures I am using polyfit.
problem_2.JPG problem_1.JPG

Answers (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider on 22 Dec 2019
Try this:
t = linspace(-40, 40, 35);
s1 = sinc(t/10);
s2 = exp(-t.^2/20);
objfcn = @(b,t) b(1).*exp(-b(2)*t.^2) + b(3).*sin(b(4).*t+b(5));
s1prm = fminsearch(@(b) norm(s1 - objfcn(b,t)), rand(5,1)*10)
s2prm = fminsearch(@(b) norm(s2 - objfcn(b,t)), rand(5,1)*10)
figure
plot(t, s1, 'rp', t, s2, 'gp')
hold on
plot(t, objfcn(s1prm,t), '--r')
plot(t, objfcn(s2prm,t), '--g')
hold off
grid
The ‘objfcn’ function is a combination of a sinusoid and a Gaussian. The regression parameters alloow it to fit both kinds of functions reasonablly well.
Experiment to get different (and perhaps better) results. Anoather option of course is to use the fft function to create a Fourier transform of the original waveform, then use a select subset of the Fourier coefficients to reconstruct it.
  1 Comment
J. Alex Lee
J. Alex Lee on 23 Dec 2019
if that doesn't work, instead of adding a sinusoid try multiplying by a sigmoid like logistic or tanh()

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