5 research outputs found
Statistical spectrum occupancy prediction for dynamic spectrum access: a classification
Spectrum scarcity due to inefficient utilisation has ignited a plethora of dynamic spectrum access solutions to accommodate the expanding demand for future wireless networks. Dynamic spectrum access systems allow secondary users to utilise spectrum bands owned by primary users if the resulting interference is kept below a pre-designated threshold. Primary and secondary user spectrum occupancy patterns determine if minimum interference and seamless communications can be guaranteed. Thus, spectrum occupancy prediction is a key component of an optimised dynamic spectrum access system. Spectrum occupancy prediction recently received significant attention in the wireless communications literature. Nevertheless, a single consolidated literature source on statistical spectrum occupancy prediction is not yet available in the open literature. Our main contribution in this paper is to provide a statistical prediction classification framework to categorise and assess current spectrum occupancy models. An overview of statistical sequential prediction is presented first. This statistical background is used to analyse current techniques for spectrum occupancy prediction. This review also extends spectrum occupancy prediction to include cooperative prediction. Finally, theoretical and implementation challenges are discussed
Spectrum prediction in dynamic spectrum access systems
Despite the remarkable foreseen advancements in maximizing network capacities, the in-expansible nature of radio spectrum exposed outdated spectrum management techniques as a core limitation. Fixed spectrum allocation inefficiency has generated a proliferation of dynamic spectrum access solutions to accommodate the growing demand for wireless, and mobile applications. This research primarily focuses on spectrum occupancy prediction which equip dynamic users with the cognitive ability to identify and exploit instantaneous availability of spectrum opportunities. The first part of this research is devoted to identifying candidate occupancy prediction techniques suitable for SOP scenarios are extensively analysed, and a theoretical based model selection framework is consolidated. The performance of single user Bayesian/Markov based techniques both analytically and numerically. Understanding performance bounds of Bayesian/Markov prediction allows the development of efficient occupancy prediction models. The third and fourth parts of this research investigates cooperative decision and data-based occupancy prediction. The expected cooperative prediction accuracy gain is addressed based on the single user prediction model. Specifically, the third contributions provide analytical approximations of single user, as well as cooperative hard fusion based spectrum prediction. Finally, the forth contribution shows soft fusion is superior and more robust compared to hard fusion cooperative prediction in terms of prediction accuracy. Throughout this research, case study analysis is provided to evaluate the performance of the proposed approaches. Analytical approaches and Monte-Carlo simulation are compared for the performance metric of interest. Remarkably, the case study analysis confirmed that the statistical approximation can predict the performance of local and hard fusion cooperative prediction accurately, capturing all the essential aspects of signal detection performance, temporal dependency of spectrum occupancy as well as the finite nature of the network
Channel Access and Reliability Performance in Cognitive Radio Networks:Modeling and Performance Analysis
Doktorgradsavhandling ved Institutt for Informasjons- og kommunikasjonsteknologi, Universitetet i AgderAccording to the facts and figures published by the international telecommunication
union (ITU) regarding information and communication technology (ICT)
industry, it is estimated that over 3.2 billion people have access to the Internet in
2015 [1]. Since 2000, this number has been octupled. Meanwhile, by the end of
2015, there were more than 7 billion mobile cellular subscriptions in the world, corresponding
to a penetration rate of 97%. As the most dynamic segment in ICT,
mobile communication is providing Internet services and consequently the mobile broadband penetration rate has reached 47% globally. Accordingly, capacity,
throughput, reliability, service quality and resource availability of wireless services
become essential factors for future mobile and wireless communications. Essentially,
all these wireless technologies, standards, services and allocation policies
rely on one common natural resource, i.e., radio spectrum.
Radio spectrum spans over the electromagnetic frequencies between 3 kHz and
300 GHz. Existing radio spectrum access techniques are based on the fixed allocation
of radio resources. These methods with fixed assigned bandwidth for exclusive
usage of licensed users are often not efficient since most of the spectrum
bands are under-utilized, either/both in the space domain or/and in the time domain.
In reality, it is observed that many spectrum bands are largely un-occupied
in many places [2], [3]. For instance, the spectrum bands which are exclusively allocated
for TV broadcasting services in USA remain un-occupied from midnight to
early morning according to the real-life measurement performed in [4]. In addition
to the wastage of radio resources, spectrum under-utilization constraints spectrum
availability for other intended users. Furthermore, legacy fixed spectrum allocation
techniques are not capable of adapting to the changes and interactions in the system,
leading to degraded network performance.
Unlike in the static spectrum allocation, a fraction of the radio spectrum is
allocated for open access as license-free bands, e.g., the industrial, scientific and
medical (ISM) bands (902-928, 2400-2483.5, 5725-5850 MHz). In 1985, the federal
communications commission (FCC) permitted to use the ISM bands for private
and unlicensed occupancy, however, under certain restrictions on transmission
power [5]. Consequently, standards like IEEE 802.11 for wireless local area networks
(WLANs) and IEEE 802.15 for wireless personal area networks (WPAN)
have grown rapidly with open access spectrum policies in the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz
ISM bands. With the co-existence of both similar and dissimilar radio technologies,
802.11 networks face challenges for providing satisfactory quality of service (QoS).
This and the above mentioned spectrum under-utilization issues motivate the spectrum
regulatory bodies to rethink about more flexible spectrum access for licenseexempt
users or more efficient radio spectrum management. Cognitive radio (CR) is
probably the most promising technology for achieving efficient spectrum utilization
in future wireless networks