Finding several local maximum values in a given range and corresponding indices
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FW
el 27 de Sept. de 2019
Respondida: Image Analyst
el 28 de Sept. de 2019
If we have a dataset "y" which consists of a sum of 5 gaussian peaks as function of time t, there will be 5 local maximum values in the whole y values. Basically, I would like to obtain the y axis maximum values and their corresponding t axis values. For example peak 1, has a maximum value 5 and it corresponds to t value of 19.
One can individually find the maximum values by giving a range say
[a ,i]=max(y(1:20));% locating maxima in a given range of the first peak
value_1= t(i); % Corresponding value of time for index i1.
One can repeat this 5 times by specifying the ranges for all peaks. Is there a better way to achieve the same result as an output in a single vector, and the corresponding time for those maxima in another vector . Thanks.
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madhan ravi
el 27 de Sept. de 2019
If you mean all the indices of the max value:
Indices = find(y==max(y(:))
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Star Strider
el 27 de Sept. de 2019
Use the Signal Processing Toolbox findpeaks function, or the islocalmax (R2017b and later) function.
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MW
el 28 de Sept. de 2019
That sounds good, will try that. I hope Matlab includes peak area determination just like OriginPro where one can pan the area of interest and determine its area.
Star Strider
el 28 de Sept. de 2019
Thank you.
‘I hope Matlab includes peak area determination just like OriginPro where one can pan the area of interest and determine its area.’
I doubt that’s an option, or if it is, I’ve not heard of it.
Fitting Gaussians is not difficult. See: Area under each peak for an illustration, including findpeaks calls. You can probably use that code with a few tweaks to use your own data. (I will help as necesary, since it’s my code. That code uses trapz, however it would probably not be very difficult to tweak it to use integral to calculate the areas, once the parameters of the Gaussians are known.)
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Image Analyst
el 28 de Sept. de 2019
It looks like you already have an acceptable answer, but if you want code to fit some specified number of Gaussians to a signal, let me know - I have that, though not in a general purpose demo right now (I'd have to create that). Attach your signal if you need this.
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