Moving sum of 4 subsequent observatins

1 view (last 30 days)
How can I get the moving sum of 4 subsequent observations out of variable 'var'? In specific, I would like the new variable to be constructed as follows:
(81,0970 + 85,2039 + 90,0506 + 89,0082) = ...
(85,2039 + 90,0506 + 89,0082 + 100,3168) = ...
(90,0506 + 89,0082 + 100,3168 + 105,4897) = ...
...

Accepted Answer

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 24 Mar 2021
Use the movsum function.
  1 Comment
Joanna Przeworska
Joanna Przeworska on 25 Mar 2021
Dear Steven,
movsum(A,[3 0]) solves my problem. Thank you.
Best regards,
JP

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (1)

Mathieu NOE
Mathieu NOE on 24 Mar 2021
hello
see example below (run it with 4 and not 5 samples averaging) :
% dummy data
data = rand(320,15);
buffer = 5; % nb of samples for averaging
% zero overlap mean averaging
[m,n] = size(data)
for ci=1:fix(length(data)/ buffer)
start_index = 1+(ci-1)*buffer;
stop_index = min(start_index+ buffer,length(data));
time_index(ci) = round((start_index+stop_index)/2); % time index expressed as sample unit (dt = 1 in this simulation)
avg_data(ci,:) =mean(data(start_index:stop_index,:)); %
end
figure(1),
plot(time_index,avg_data);
  2 Comments
Joanna Przeworska
Joanna Przeworska on 25 Mar 2021
Dear Mathieu,
Thank you for your suggestion, however, to be honest, I thought there could be more simplest way to solve my problem. If am not able to find any other, I will use our idea.
Kind regards, JP
Mathieu NOE
Mathieu NOE on 25 Mar 2021
hello Joanna
it's coming from long time ago when I rote most of the functions I still use today, now , as mentionned by Steven Lord below, you can do it in one line with movsum;
but basically that movsum function implements the code I show you

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Operating on Diagonal Matrices in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!