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Quantization

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Quantization is the property of being contstrained to a set of discrete value, rather than varying continuously.


Quantisation (in signal processing) refers to the process of reducing a continuous signal to a set of discrete symbols or integer values. In general, a quantization operator can be represented as


Q(x) = round(f(x))


where x is a real number, Q(x) an integer, and f(x) is an arbitary real-valued function that controls the 'quantization law' of the particular coder.


For example, in digital telephony, two popular quantization schemes are the 'A-law' and 'µ-law', each mapping an analog signal to an 8-bit digital value, but each with a different function f.


See also:




Quantization is also used, in quantum physics to describe the process by which a physical system exhibits quantized behavior, rather than continuous, or 'classical' behavior.