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The cross-correlation function is defined as follows if $\bar{f}$ is the complex conjugate of $f$ and we assume that $f$ is real, such that $\bar{f} = f$.

$ \begin{align} f \star g &= \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} \overline{f(\tau)} g(t + \tau) d\tau \\ &= \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(\tau) g(t + \tau) d\tau \\ \end{align} $

Now, here is convolution function

$ \begin{align} f * g = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(\tau) g(t - \tau) d\tau \end{align} $

So as $t$ increases, we can imagine that in convolution, $g$ moves from left to right on the $\tau$ axis. However, in cross-correlation, g moves from right to left, which is counterintuitive.

Am I correct in my interpretation? If so, why is this? Is it just a mathematical quirk or is there some deeper meaning?

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    While "$g$ moves from left to right" in convolutions, remember that it is also "flipped over". Convolutions and correlations are related: in terms of Fourier transforms, convolutions correspond to multiplication $F(\omega)G(\omega)$ in the transform domain while correlations correspond to inner product type calculation $F^*(\omega)G(\omega)$.2012-03-19

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