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"While a spectrum is defined as a function of frequency, a cepstrum is defined as a function of 'quefrency'. Quefrency is measured in 'time' and can be interpreted as a measure for time offsets of patterns in the time domain."

What in the actual fuck did I just read

Comments
  • 2
    I don't remember anything from my network analysis class. I remember changing domains allows for different kinds of math on things. That is about it.
  • 4
    Quefrency is measured in queefs per second.
  • 5
    Those invented words lol, I can't take any of that seriously.
    “The terms "quefrency", "alanysis", "cepstrum" and "saphe" were invented by the authors by rearranging the letters in frequency, analysis, spectrum, and phase.”
  • 0
    Basically wavelength in time
  • 4
    It really reads like wikipedia is trying to troll you. 😂

    Cepstrum is an anagram for Spectrum and Quefrency is an anagram for Frequency.

    I had to check if I‘m really on wikipedia and not something like pediwikia.
  • 2
    @donkulator I honestly don't know if what you say is real or joke. I read this page and wonder now:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
  • 2
    @Demolishun authors are science trolls
  • 7
    @Lensflare The difference between a science troll and a scientist has never been successfully measured in the laboratory.
  • 1
    @Lensflare my friend probably knows all about this. He is working on audio and speech synthesis using wavelets or some shit. He is trying to reduce audio to some other representation and recreating using regular synthesizers.
  • 5
    The inverse of frequency is period. I don't know what the real name for "cepstrum" is but I'd bet that it exists. This kind of reinventive dilettantism is a cancer all too familiar; the Rust vocabulary has different words for all the basic terms of symbolic algebra.
  • 0
    is that rust
  • 0
    Sounds like you're having a complex cepstrum
  • 2
    @lorentz it's repiod, obviously
  • 1
    @cafecortado "Those invented words "

    all words are invented. or do you believe a linguist dug a dictionary in ancient athens and no new words were created since then?
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