1,824 research outputs found
Outage analysis of superposition modulation aided network coded cooperation in the presence of network coding noise
We consider a network, where multiple sourcedestination pairs communicate with the aid of a half-duplex relay node (RN), which adopts decode-forward (DF) relaying and superposition-modulation (SPM) for combining the signals transmitted by the source nodes (SNs) and then forwards the composite signal to all the destination nodes (DNs). Each DN extracts the signals transmitted by its own SN from the composite signal by subtracting the signals overheard from the unwanted SNs. We derive tight lower-bounds for the outage probability for transmission over Rayleigh fading channels and invoke diversity combining at the DNs, which is validated by simulation for both the symmetric and the asymmetric network configurations. For the high signal-to-noise ratio regime, we derive both an upperbound as well as a lower-bound for the outage performance and analyse the achievable diversity gain. It is revealed that a diversity order of 2 is achieved, regardless of the number of SN-DN pairs in the network. We also highlight the fact that the outage performance is dominated by the quality of the worst overheated link, because it contributes most substantially to the network coding noise. Finally, we use the lower bound for designing a relay selection scheme for the proposed SPM based network coded cooperative communication (SPM-NC-CC) system.<br/
Beacon-Assisted Spectrum Access with Cooperative Cognitive Transmitter and Receiver
Spectrum access is an important function of cognitive radios for detecting
and utilizing spectrum holes without interfering with the legacy systems. In
this paper we propose novel cooperative communication models and show how
deploying such cooperations between a pair of secondary transmitter and
receiver assists them in identifying spectrum opportunities more reliably.
These cooperations are facilitated by dynamically and opportunistically
assigning one of the secondary users as a relay to assist the other one which
results in more efficient spectrum hole detection. Also, we investigate the
impact of erroneous detection of spectrum holes and thereof missing
communication opportunities on the capacity of the secondary channel. The
capacity of the secondary users with interference-avoiding spectrum access is
affected by 1) how effectively the availability of vacant spectrum is sensed by
the secondary transmitter-receiver pair, and 2) how correlated are the
perceptions of the secondary transmitter-receiver pair about network spectral
activity. We show that both factors are improved by using the proposed
cooperative protocols. One of the proposed protocols requires explicit
information exchange in the network. Such information exchange in practice is
prone to wireless channel errors (i.e., is imperfect) and costs bandwidth loss.
We analyze the effects of such imperfect information exchange on the capacity
as well as the effect of bandwidth cost on the achievable throughput. The
protocols are also extended to multiuser secondary networks.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figures, To appear in IEEE Transaction on Mobile
Computin
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