Recommended DSP reading

Hello,

I’m looking for recommended reading to better by understanding of DSP.
I’m
nearing the end of The Scientist and Engineer’s Guide to Digital Signal
Processing
, and have found it to be an excellent resource on the
fundamentals. I’m hoping to follow it up with a book or two to with a
deeper focus on DSP algorithms / filter design / SDR.

I have a solid background in programming, but no college math or signal
processing, so I’m hoping to find some material that focuses more on
application than theory. I would normally take the time to learn the
requisite math beforehand, but I’m under a time constraint from the
DARPA
spectrum challenge.

What books (or online resources) would you recommend?

Thanks,

Marc

On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 01:46:40PM -0700, Marc N. wrote:

I’m looking for recommended reading to better by understanding of DSP. I’m
nearing the end of The Scientist and Engineer’s Guide to Digital Signal
Processing, and have found it to be an excellent resource on the fundamentals.
I’m hoping to follow it up with a book or two to with a deeper focus on DSP
algorithms / filter design / SDR.

Marc,

there’s this page:
http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/wiki/SuggestedReading
in case you haven’t found that yet.

I have a solid background in programming, but no college math or signal
processing, so I’m hoping to find some material that focuses more on
application than theory. I would normally take the time to learn the requisite
math beforehand, but I’m under a time constraint from the DARPA spectrum
challenge.

I find that R. Lyons’ books are pretty good reads if you want practical
instead of theoretical.

MB


Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Communications Engineering Lab (CEL)

Dipl.-Ing. Martin B.
Research Associate

Kaiserstraße 12
Building 05.01
76131 Karlsruhe

Phone: +49 721 608-43790
Fax: +49 721 608-46071
www.cel.kit.edu

KIT – University of the State of Baden-Württemberg and
National Laboratory of the Helmholtz Association

Thank you for that information. R Lyons’ books are just what I was
looking
for.