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Published December 1, 2006 | public
Journal Article Open

Near-Optimal Signal Recovery From Random Projections: Universal Encoding Strategies?

Abstract

Suppose we are given a vector f in a class F ⊂ ℝN, e.g., a class of digital signals or digital images. How many linear measurements do we need to make about f to be able to recover f to within precision ε in the Euclidean (ℓ2) metric? This paper shows that if the objects of interest are sparse in a fixed basis or compressible, then it is possible to reconstruct f to within very high accuracy from a small number of random measurements by solving a simple linear program. More precisely, suppose that the nth largest entry of the vector |f| (or of its coefficients in a fixed basis) obeys |f|(n) ≤ R n^(1-p), where R > 0 and p > 0. Suppose that we take measurements yk = {f,Xk}, k = 1, . . .,K, where the Xk are N-dimensional Gaussian vectors with independent standard normal entries. Then for each f obeying the decay estimate above for some 0 < p < 1 and with overwhelming probability, our reconstruction f#, defined as the solution to the constraints yk = 〈f#, Xk〉 with minimal ℓ1 norm, obeys [equation]. There is a sense in which this result is optimal; it is generally impossible to obtain a higher accuracy from any set of K measurements whatsoever. The methodology extends to various other random measurement ensembles; for example, we show that similar results hold if one observes a few randomly sampled Fourier coefficients of f. In fact, the results are quite general and require only two hypotheses on the measurement ensemble which are detailed.

Additional Information

© Copyright 2006 IEEE. Reprinted with permission. Manuscript received November 1, 2004; revised April 3, 2006. [Posted online: 2006-11-30] The work of E.J. Candes was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grants DMS 01-40698 (FRG) and ACI-0204932 (ITR), and by an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship. The work of T. Tao was supported in part by a grant from the Packard Foundation. The material in this paper was presented at Multiscale Geometry and Analysis in High Dimensions, Los Angeles, CA, October 2004. E.J. Candes would like to thank Justin Romberg and Houman Ohwadi for conversations related to this project, and Noureddine El Karoui for sending us an early draft of his Ph.D. dissertation. E.J. Candes would also like to thank Joel Tropp for sharing some notes. T. Tao thanks Wilhelm Schlag and Gerd Mockenhaupt for pointing out the relevance of Bourgain's work [1], [2]. Finally, they would like to thank the anonymous referees for providing useful references (see Section I-D) and for their role in improving the original manuscript.

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August 22, 2023
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