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In signal processing, the overlap–add method is an efficient way to evaluate the discrete convolution of a very long signal with a finite impulse response (FIR) filter :
where h[m] = 0 for m outside the region [1, M]. This article uses common abstract notations, such as or in which it is understood that the functions should be thought of in their totality, rather than at specific instants (see Convolution#Notation).
The concept is to divide the problem into multiple convolutions of h[n] with short segments of :
where L is an arbitrary segment length. Then:
and y[n] can be written as a sum of short convolutions:
where the linear convolution is zero outside the region [1, L + M − 1]. And for any parameter it is equivalent to the N-point circular convolution of with in the region [1, N]. The advantage is that the circular convolution can be computed more efficiently than linear convolution, according to the circular convolution theorem:
where: