Analysis of finite word-length effects in fixed-point systems

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Abstract

Systems based on fixed-point arithmetic, when carefully designed, seem to behave as their infinite precision analogues. Most often, however, this is only a macroscopic impression: finite word-lengths inevitably approximate the reference behavior introducing quantization errors, and confine the macroscopic correspondence to a restricted range of input values. Understanding these differences is crucial to design optimized fixed-point implementations that will behave "as expected" upon deployment. Thus, in this chapter, we survey the main approaches proposed in literature to model the impact of finite precision in fixed-point systems. In particular, we focus on the rounding errors introduced after reducing the number of leastsignificant bits in signals and coefficients during the so-called quantization process.

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Menard, D., Caffarena, G., Lopez, J. A., Novo, D., & Sentieys, O. (2018). Analysis of finite word-length effects in fixed-point systems. In Handbook of Signal Processing Systems (pp. 1063–1101). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91734-4_29

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