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Thomson's Multitaper Method Revisited

Signal Processing 2021-03-23 v1 Information Theory math.IT Statistics Theory Statistics Theory

Abstract

Thomson's multitaper method estimates the power spectrum of a signal from NN equally spaced samples by averaging KK tapered periodograms. Discrete prolate spheroidal sequences (DPSS) are used as tapers since they provide excellent protection against spectral leakage. Thomson's multitaper method is widely used in applications, but most of the existing theory is qualitative or asymptotic. Furthermore, many practitioners use a DPSS bandwidth WW and number of tapers that are smaller than what the theory suggests is optimal because the computational requirements increase with the number of tapers. We revisit Thomson's multitaper method from a linear algebra perspective involving subspace projections. This provides additional insight and helps us establish nonasymptotic bounds on some statistical properties of the multitaper spectral estimate, which are similar to existing asymptotic results. We show using K=2NWO(log(NW))K=2NW-O(\log(NW)) tapers instead of the traditional 2NWO(1)2NW-O(1) tapers better protects against spectral leakage, especially when the power spectrum has a high dynamic range. Our perspective also allows us to derive an ϵ\epsilon-approximation to the multitaper spectral estimate which can be evaluated on a grid of frequencies using O(log(NW)log1ϵ)O(\log(NW)\log\tfrac{1}{\epsilon}) FFTs instead of K=O(NW)K=O(NW) FFTs. This is useful in problems where many samples are taken, and thus, using many tapers is desirable.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2103.11586,
  title  = {Thomson's Multitaper Method Revisited},
  author = {Santhosh Karnik and Justin Romberg and Mark A. Davenport},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.11586},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

39 pages, 7 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-24T00:24:29.452Z