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seewave (version 1.5.6)

lfs: Linear Frequency Shift

Description

This function linearly shifts all the frequency content of a time wave.

Usage

lfs(wave, f, shift, wl = 128, wn = "hanning", output = "matrix")

Arguments

wave
an R object.
f
sampling frequency of wave (in Hz). Does not need to be specified if embedded in wave.
shift
positive or negative frequency shift to apply (in Hz).)
wl
window length for the analysis (even number of points, by default = 512).
wn
window name, see ftwindow (by default "hanning").
output
character string, the class of the object to return, either "matrix", "Wave", "Sample", "audioSample" or "ts".

Value

  • If plot is FALSE, a new wave is returned. The class of the returned object is set with the argument output.

Details

A short-term Fourier transform is first applied to the signal (see spectro), then the frequency shift is applied and the new signal is eventually generated using the reverse of the Fourier Transform (fft). There is therefore neither temporal modifications nor amplitude modifications.

References

Hopp, S. L., Owren, M. J. and Evans, C. S. (Eds) 1998. Animal acoustic communication. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg.

See Also

ffilter, spectro

Examples

Run this code
data(orni)
a<-lfs(orni,f=22050,shift=1000)
spectro(a,f=22050)
# to be compared with the original signal
spectro(orni,f=22050)

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