In the same way that odd impulse responses are related to even impulse
responses, linear-phase filters are generally taken to include
antisymmetric impulse responses of the form
,
.
An antisymmetric impulse response is simply a delayed odd impulse
response (usually delayed enough to make it causal). The
corresponding frequency response is not strictly linear phase, but the
phase is instead linear with a constant offset (by
). Since
an affine function is any function of the form
, where
and
are
constants, an antisymmetric impulse response can be called an
affine-phase filter. However, in practice, such a filter
may be called a linear-phase filter,
since it is designed and implemented in essentially the same way
[65].
Note that truly linear-phase filters have both a constant phase delay and a constant group delay. Affine-phase filters, on the other hand, have a constant group delay, but not a constant phase delay.