Abstract

The time-frequency and time-scale communities have recently developed a large number of overcomplete waveform dictionaries---stationary wavelets, wavelet packets, cosine packets, chirplets, and warplets, to name a few. Decomposition into overcomplete systems is not unique, and several methods for decomposition have been proposed, including the method of frames (MOF), matching pursuit (MP), and, for special dictionaries, the best orthogonal basis (BOB). Basis pursuit (BP) is a principle for decomposing a signal into an "optimal"' superposition of dictionary elements, where optimal means having the smallest l1 norm of coefficients among all such decompositions. We give examples exhibiting several advantages over MOF, MP, and BOB, including better sparsity and superresolution. BP has interesting relations to ideas in areas as diverse as ill-posed problems, abstract harmonic analysis, total variation denoising, and multiscale edge denoising. BP in highly overcomplete dictionaries leads to large-scale optimization problems. With signals of length 8192 and a wavelet packet dictionary, one gets an equivalent linear program of size 8192 by 212,992. Such problems can be attacked successfully only because of recent advances in linear and quadratic programming by interior-point methods. We obtain reasonable success with a primal-dual logarithmic barrier method and conjugate-gradient solver.

Keywords

Matching pursuitBasis pursuitWavelet packet decompositionWaveletMathematicsAlgorithmInterior point methodTotal variation denoisingOrthogonal basisSparse approximationComputer scienceNoise reductionMathematical optimizationCompressed sensingWavelet transformArtificial intelligence

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
43
Issue
1
Pages
129-159
Citations
5046
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Scott Shaobing Chen, David L. Donoho, Michael A. Saunders (2001). Atomic Decomposition by Basis Pursuit. SIAM Review , 43 (1) , 129-159. https://doi.org/10.1137/s003614450037906x

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DOI
10.1137/s003614450037906x