arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1402.5324 [cs.IT]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

On Asymptotic Incoherence and its Implications for Compressed Sensing of Inverse Problems

Alex D. Jones, Ben Adcock, Anders C. Hansen

Published 2014-02-21, updated 2015-07-07Version 2

Recently, it has been shown that incoherence is an unrealistic assumption for compressed sensing when applied to many inverse problems. Instead, the key property that permits efficient recovery in such problems is so-called local incoherence. Similarly, the standard notion of sparsity is also inadequate for many real world problems. In particular, in many applications, the optimal sampling strategy depends on asymptotic incoherence and the signal sparsity structure. The purpose of this paper is to study asymptotic incoherence and its implications towards the design of optimal sampling strategies and efficient sparsity bases. It is determined how fast asymptotic incoherence can decay in general for isometries. Furthermore it is shown that Fourier sampling and wavelet sparsity, whilst globally coherent, yield optimal asymptotic incoherence as a power law up to a constant factor. Sharp bounds on the asymptotic incoherence for Fourier sampling with polynomial bases are also provided. A numerical experiment is also presented to demonstrate the role of asymptotic incoherence in finding good subsampling strategies.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1203.3815 [cs.IT] (Published 2012-03-15, updated 2012-08-28)
Theory and Applications of Compressed Sensing
arXiv:1012.0602 [cs.IT] (Published 2010-12-02, updated 2011-12-12)
LDPC Codes for Compressed Sensing
arXiv:1404.7666 [cs.IT] (Published 2014-04-30)
Distributed Quantization for Compressed Sensing