2,044 research outputs found
Multiband Spectrum Access: Great Promises for Future Cognitive Radio Networks
Cognitive radio has been widely considered as one of the prominent solutions
to tackle the spectrum scarcity. While the majority of existing research has
focused on single-band cognitive radio, multiband cognitive radio represents
great promises towards implementing efficient cognitive networks compared to
single-based networks. Multiband cognitive radio networks (MB-CRNs) are
expected to significantly enhance the network's throughput and provide better
channel maintenance by reducing handoff frequency. Nevertheless, the wideband
front-end and the multiband spectrum access impose a number of challenges yet
to overcome. This paper provides an in-depth analysis on the recent
advancements in multiband spectrum sensing techniques, their limitations, and
possible future directions to improve them. We study cooperative communications
for MB-CRNs to tackle a fundamental limit on diversity and sampling. We also
investigate several limits and tradeoffs of various design parameters for
MB-CRNs. In addition, we explore the key MB-CRNs performance metrics that
differ from the conventional metrics used for single-band based networks.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures; published in the Proceedings of the IEEE
Journal, Special Issue on Future Radio Spectrum Access, March 201
Market Based Approaches for Dynamic Spectrum Assignment
Abstract—Much of the technical literature on spectrum sharing has been on developing technologies and systems for non-cooperative) opportunistic use. In this paper, we situate this approach to secondary spectrum use in a broader context, one that includes cooperative approaches to Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA). In this paper, we introduce readers to this broader approach to DSA by contrasting it with non-cooperative sharing (opportunistic use), surveying relevant literature, and suggesting future directions for researc
Spectrum sharing models in cognitive radio networks
Spectrum scarcity demands thinking new ways to
manage the distribution of radio frequency bands so that its use is more effective. The emerging technology that can enable this paradigm shift is the cognitive radio. Different models for
organizing and managing cognitive radios have emerged, all with specific strategic purposes. In this article we review the allocation spectrum patterns of cognitive radio networks and
analyse which are the common basis of each model.We expose the vulnerabilities and open challenges that still threaten the adoption
and exploitation of cognitive radios for open civil networks.L'escassetat de demandes d'espectre fan pensar en noves formes de gestionar la distribució de les bandes de freqüència de ràdio perquè el seu ús sigui més efectiu. La tecnologia emergent que pot permetre aquest canvi de paradigma és la ràdio cognitiva. Han sorgit diferents models d'organització i gestió de les ràdios cognitives, tots amb determinats fins estratègics. En aquest article es revisen els patrons d'assignació de l'espectre de les xarxes de ràdio cognitiva i s'analitzen quals són la base comuna de cada model. S'exposen les vulnerabilitats i els desafiaments oberts que segueixen amenaçant l'adopció i l'explotació de les ràdios cognitives per obrir les xarxes civils.La escasez de demandas de espectro hacen pensar en nuevas formas de gestionar la distribución de las bandas de frecuencia de radio para que su uso sea más efectivo. La tecnología emergente que puede permitir este cambio de paradigma es la radio cognitiva. Han surgido diferentes modelos de organización y gestión de las radios cognitivas, todos con determinados fines estratégicos. En este artículo se revisan los patrones de asignación del espectro de las redes de radio cognitiva y se analizan cuales son la base común de cada modelo. Se exponen las vulnerabilidades y los desafíos abiertos que siguen amenazando la adopción y la explotación de las radios cognitivas para abrir las redes civiles
Security in Cognitive Radio Networks
In this paper, we investigate the information-theoretic security by modeling
a cognitive radio wiretap channel under quality-of-service (QoS) constraints
and interference power limitations inflicted on primary users (PUs). We
initially define four different transmission scenarios regarding channel
sensing results and their correctness. We provide effective secure transmission
rates at which a secondary eavesdropper is refrained from listening to a
secondary transmitter (ST). Then, we construct a channel state transition
diagram that characterizes this channel model. We obtain the effective secure
capacity which describes the maximum constant buffer arrival rate under given
QoS constraints. We find out the optimal transmission power policies that
maximize the effective secure capacity, and then, we propose an algorithm that,
in general, converges quickly to these optimal policy values. Finally, we show
the performance levels and gains obtained under different channel conditions
and scenarios. And, we emphasize, in particular, the significant effect of
hidden-terminal problem on information-theoretic security in cognitive radios.Comment: Submitted to CISS 201
Wideband Spectrum Sensing in Cognitive Radio Networks
Spectrum sensing is an essential enabling functionality for cognitive radio
networks to detect spectrum holes and opportunistically use the under-utilized
frequency bands without causing harmful interference to legacy networks. This
paper introduces a novel wideband spectrum sensing technique, called multiband
joint detection, which jointly detects the signal energy levels over multiple
frequency bands rather than consider one band at a time. The proposed strategy
is efficient in improving the dynamic spectrum utilization and reducing
interference to the primary users. The spectrum sensing problem is formulated
as a class of optimization problems in interference limited cognitive radio
networks. By exploiting the hidden convexity in the seemingly non-convex
problem formulations, optimal solutions for multiband joint detection are
obtained under practical conditions. Simulation results show that the proposed
spectrum sensing schemes can considerably improve the system performance. This
paper establishes important principles for the design of wideband spectrum
sensing algorithms in cognitive radio networks
Protocol Design and Stability Analysis of Cooperative Cognitive Radio Users
A single cognitive radio transmitter--receiver pair shares the spectrum with
two primary users communicating with their respective receivers. Each primary
user has a local traffic queue, whereas the cognitive user has three queues;
one storing its own traffic while the other two are relaying queues used to
store primary relayed packets admitted from the two primary users. A new
cooperative cognitive medium access control protocol for the described network
is proposed, where the cognitive user exploits the idle periods of the primary
spectrum bands. Traffic arrival to each relaying queue is controlled using a
tuneable admittance factor, while relaying queues service scheduling is
controlled via channel access probabilities assigned to each queue based on the
band of operation. The stability region of the proposed protocol is
characterized shedding light on its maximum expected throughput. Numerical
results demonstrate the performance gains of the proposed cooperative cognitive
protocol.Comment: Accepted in WCNC 201
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