I was reading an old article in IEEE Education magazine by Robbins and Fawcett titled "A Classroom Demonstration of Correlation, Convolution and the Superposition Integral" DOI: 10.1109/TE.1973.4320783.
The article is interesting but the definitions employed by author are somewhat non-conventional and this is not a typographical error.
For example, the author defines the convolution of two periodic functions as:
$$\theta(\tau)=\frac{1}{T} \int_{0}^{T} f(t) g(t+\tau) d t$$
and the next lines says "or"
$$\theta(\tau)=\frac{1}{T} \int_{0}^{T} f(-t) g(t+\tau) d t.$$
I have not seen convolution integral with a positive sign but the second one is more conventional. The negative sign does the "folding" job in graphical convolution, so I thought the negative sign is necessary.
Similarly, correlation of two periodic functions is defined there as
$$\varphi(\tau)=\frac{1}{T} \int_{0}^{T} f(t) g(t-\tau) d t$$ and the pictorial representations seems more like what traditional convolution process is graphically shown.
How is this $\theta(\tau)=\frac{1}{T} \int_{0}^{T} f(t) g(t+\tau) d t$ representation, a convolution?