How to understand spectrogram function
Show older comments
Hello, can someone explain please (in plain english as much as possible) what's the difference between:
1) [s,w,t] = spectrogram(x,window,noverlap,w) returns the spectrogram at the normalized frequencies specified in w.
and
2) [s,f,t] = spectrogram(x,window,noverlap,f,fs) returns the spectrogram at the cyclical frequencies specified in f.
maybe someone can provide a simple example.
THANK YOU
Accepted Answer
More Answers (5)
Jonathan Grimbert
on 23 May 2018
1 vote
thanks Vidya Viswanathan for your answer. However I got a question on the X axis... How do you know it is in ms for the second spectrogram ?
Thanks for your answer
Zulfidin Khodzhaev
on 18 Dec 2018
0 votes
Is it possible to get rid of "colorbar", which is automatically there with "spectrogram" command ?
1 Comment
Pawan Sharma
on 12 Feb 2019
%% use this to get rid of the colorbar at the end of your plot syntax
colorbar off
Mohannad suleiman
on 27 Feb 2021
0 votes
dear vidya how can we show the (power / frequency ) in the figures
1 Comment
Aditya Ramesh
on 1 Dec 2021
colorbar off
This disables the colorbar
colorbar on
This shows the colorbar without the bar label (power/frequency)
Colorbar with the legend label is shown by default even if no colorbar properties are defined. SO basically write nothign after spectrogram(.......) to get what you want.
Christoph
on 25 Aug 2021
0 votes
You can also have a look here --> https://github.com/Christoph-Lauer/Sonogram
Lazaros Moysis
on 14 Mar 2023
Based on your comments and feedback, I want to understand, how could I compute the Spectrogram according to the Bark scale, which is
BandBarks = [20, 100, 200, 300, 400, 510, 630, 770, 920, 1080, 1270, 1480, 1720, 2000, 2320, 2700, 3150, 3700, 4400, 5300, 6400, 7700];
Categories
Find more on Time-Frequency Analysis in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!
