2,167 research outputs found
Byzantine Attack and Defense in Cognitive Radio Networks: A Survey
The Byzantine attack in cooperative spectrum sensing (CSS), also known as the
spectrum sensing data falsification (SSDF) attack in the literature, is one of
the key adversaries to the success of cognitive radio networks (CRNs). In the
past couple of years, the research on the Byzantine attack and defense
strategies has gained worldwide increasing attention. In this paper, we provide
a comprehensive survey and tutorial on the recent advances in the Byzantine
attack and defense for CSS in CRNs. Specifically, we first briefly present the
preliminaries of CSS for general readers, including signal detection
techniques, hypothesis testing, and data fusion. Second, we analyze the spear
and shield relation between Byzantine attack and defense from three aspects:
the vulnerability of CSS to attack, the obstacles in CSS to defense, and the
games between attack and defense. Then, we propose a taxonomy of the existing
Byzantine attack behaviors and elaborate on the corresponding attack
parameters, which determine where, who, how, and when to launch attacks. Next,
from the perspectives of homogeneous or heterogeneous scenarios, we classify
the existing defense algorithms, and provide an in-depth tutorial on the
state-of-the-art Byzantine defense schemes, commonly known as robust or secure
CSS in the literature. Furthermore, we highlight the unsolved research
challenges and depict the future research directions.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutoiral
Channel assembling and resource allocation in multichannel spectrum sharing wireless networks
Submitted in fulfilment of the academic requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Engineering, in the School of Electrical and
Information Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment,
at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2017The continuous evolution of wireless communications technologies has increasingly imposed a
burden on the use of radio spectrum. Due to the proliferation of new wireless networks applications
and services, the radio spectrum is getting saturated and becoming a limited resource. To a large
extent, spectrum scarcity may be a result of deficient spectrum allocation and management policies,
rather than of the physical shortage of radio frequencies. The conventional static spectrum
allocation has been found to be ineffective, leading to overcrowding and inefficient use. Cognitive
radio (CR) has therefore emerged as an enabling technology that facilitates dynamic spectrum
access (DSA), with a great potential to address the issue of spectrum scarcity and inefficient use.
However, provisioning of reliable and robust communication with seamless operation in cognitive
radio networks (CRNs) is a challenging task. The underlying challenges include development of
non-intrusive dynamic resource allocation (DRA) and optimization techniques.
The main focus of this thesis is development of adaptive channel assembling (ChA) and DRA
schemes, with the aim to maximize performance of secondary user (SU) nodes in CRNs, without
degrading performance of primary user (PU) nodes in a primary network (PN). The key objectives
are therefore four-fold. Firstly, to optimize ChA and DRA schemes in overlay CRNs. Secondly, to
develop analytical models for quantifying performance of ChA schemes over fading channels in
overlay CRNs. Thirdly, to extend the overlay ChA schemes into hybrid overlay and underlay
architectures, subject to power control and interference mitigation; and finally, to extend the
adaptive ChA and DRA schemes for multiuser multichannel access CRNs.
Performance analysis and evaluation of the developed ChA and DRA is presented, mainly through
extensive simulations and analytical models. Further, the cross validation has been performed
between simulations and analytical results to confirm the accuracy and preciseness of the novel
analytical models developed in this thesis. In general, the presented results demonstrate improved
performance of SU nodes in terms of capacity, collision probability, outage probability and forced
termination probability when employing the adaptive ChA and DRA in CRNs.CK201
Markov Decision Processes with Applications in Wireless Sensor Networks: A Survey
Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) consist of autonomous and resource-limited
devices. The devices cooperate to monitor one or more physical phenomena within
an area of interest. WSNs operate as stochastic systems because of randomness
in the monitored environments. For long service time and low maintenance cost,
WSNs require adaptive and robust methods to address data exchange, topology
formulation, resource and power optimization, sensing coverage and object
detection, and security challenges. In these problems, sensor nodes are to make
optimized decisions from a set of accessible strategies to achieve design
goals. This survey reviews numerous applications of the Markov decision process
(MDP) framework, a powerful decision-making tool to develop adaptive algorithms
and protocols for WSNs. Furthermore, various solution methods are discussed and
compared to serve as a guide for using MDPs in WSNs
Smart traffic management protocol based on VANET architecture
Nowadays one of the hottest theme in wireless environments research is the application of the newest technologies to road safety problems and traffic management exploiting the (VANET) architecture. In this work, a novel protocol that aims to achieve a better traffic management is proposed. The overal system is able to reduce traffic level inside the city exploiting inter-communication among vehicles and support infrastructures also known as (V2V) and (V2I) communications. We design a network protocol called (STMP) that takes advantages of IEEE 802.11p standard. On each road several sensors system are placed and they are responsible of monitoring. Gathered data are spread in the network exploiting ad-hoc protocol messages. The increasing knowledge about environment conditions make possible to take preventive actions. Moreover, having a realtime monitoring of the lanes it is possible to reveal roads and city blocks congestions in a shorter time. An external entity to the (VANET) is responsible to manage traffic and rearrange traffic along the lanes of the city avoiding huge traffic levels
From Sensing to Predictions and Database Technique: A Review of TV White Space Information Acquisition in Cognitive Radio Networks
Strategies to acquire white space information is the single most significant functionality in cognitive
radio networks (CRNs) and as such, it has gone some evolution to enhance information accuracy. The
evolution trends are spectrum sensing, prediction algorithm and recently, geo‐location database
technique. Previously, spectrum sensing was the main technique for detecting the presence/absence of
a primary user (PU) signal in a given radio frequency (RF) spectrum. However, this expectation could not
materialized as a result of numerous technical challenges ranging from hardware imperfections to RF
signal impairments. To convey the evolutionary trends in the development of white space information,
we present a survey of the contemporary advancements in PU detection with emphasis on the practical
deployment of CRNs i.e. Television white space (TVWS) networks. It is found that geo‐location database
is the most reliable technique to acquire TVWS information although, it is financially driven. Finally,
using financially driven database model, this study compared the data‐rate and spectral efficiency of FCC
and Ofcom TV channelization. It was discovered that Ofcom TV channelization outperforms FCC TV
channelization as a result of having higher spectrum bandwidth. We proposed the adoption of an allinclusive
TVWS information acquisition model as the future research direction for TVWS information
acquisition techniques
Intelligent Approaches for Energy-Efficient Resource Allocation in the Cognitive Radio Network
The cognitive radio (CR) is evolved as the promising technology to alleviate the spectrum scarcity issues by allowing the secondary users (SUs) to use the licensed band in an opportunistic manner. Various challenges need to be addressed before the successful deployment of CR technology. This thesis work presents intelligent resource allocation techniques for improving energy efficiency (EE) of low battery powered CR nodes where resources refer to certain important parameters that directly or indirectly affect EE. As far as the primary user (PU) is concerned, the SUs are allowed to transmit on the licensed band until their transmission power would not cause any interference to the primary network. Also, the SUs must use the licensed band efficiently during the PU’s absence. Therefore, the two key factors such as protection to the primary network and throughput above the threshold are important from the PU’s and SUs’ perspective, respectively. In deployment of CR, malicious users may be more active to prevent the CR users from accessing the spectrum or cause unnecessary interference to the both primary and secondary transmission. Considering these aspects, this thesis focuses on developing novel approaches for energy-efficient resource allocation under the constraints of interference to the PR, minimum achievable data rate and maximum transmission power by optimizing the resource parameters such as sensing time and the secondary transmission power with suitably selecting SUs.
Two different domains considered in this thesis are the soft decision fusion (SDF)-based cooperative spectrum sensing CR network (CRN) models without and with the primary user emulation attack (PUEA). An efficient iterative algorithm called iterative Dinkelbach method (IDM) is proposed to maximize EE with suitable SUs in the absence of the attacker. In the proposed approaches, different constraints are evaluated considering the negative impact of the PUE attacker on the secondary transmission while maximizing EE with the PUE attacker. The optimization problem associated with the non-convex constraints is solved by our proposed iterative resource allocation algorithms (novel iterative resource allocation (NIRA) and novel adaptive resource allocation (NARA)) with suitable selection of SUs for jointly optimizing the sensing time and power allocation. In the CR enhanced vehicular ad hoc network (CR-VANET), the time varying channel responses with the vehicular movement are considered without and with the attacker. In the absence of the PUE attacker, an interference-aware power allocation scheme based on normalized least mean square (NLMS) algorithm is proposed to maximize EE considering the dynamic constraints. In the presence of the attacker, the optimization problem associated with the non-convex and time-varying constraints is solved by an efficient approach based on genetic algorithm (GA). Further, an investigation is attempted to apply the CR technology in industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band through spectrum occupancy prediction, sub-band selection and optimal power allocation to the CR users using the real time indoor measurement data. Efficacies of the proposed approaches are verified through extensive simulation studies in the MATLAB environment and by comparing with the existing literature. Further, the impacts of different network parameters on the system performance are analyzed in detail. The proposed approaches will be highly helpful in designing energy-efficient CRN model with low complexity for future CR deployment
ActMesh- A Cognitive Resource Management paradigm for dynamic mobile Internet Access with Reliability Guarantees
Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) are going increasing attention as a flexible low-cost networking architecture to provide media Internet access over metropolitan areas to mobile clients requiring multimedia services. In WMNs, Mesh Routers (MRs) from the mesh backbone and accomplish the twofold
task of traffic forwarding, as well as providing multimedia access to mobile Mesh Clients (MCs). Due to the intensive bandwidth-resource requested for supporting QoS-demanding multimedia services, performance of the current WMNs is mainly limited by spectrum-crowding and traffic-congestion, as only scarce spectrum-resources is currently licensed for the MCs' access. In principle, this problem could be mitigated by exploiting in a media-friendly
(e.g., content-aware) way the context-aware capabilities offered by the Cognitive
Radio (CR) paradigm. As integrated exploitation of both content and
context-aware system's capabilities is at the basis of our proposed Active Mesh (ActMesh) networking paradigm. This last aims at defining a network-wide architecture for realizing media-friendly Cognitive Mesh nets (e.g., context aware Cognitive Mesh nets). Hence, main contribution of this work is four fold:
1. After introducing main functional blocks of our ActMesh architecture, suitable self-adaptive Belief Propagation and Soft Data Fusion algorithms are designed to provide context-awareness. This is done under
both cooperative and noncooperative sensing frameworks.
2. The resulting network-wide resource management problem is modelled as a constrained stochastic Network Utility Maximization (NUM) problem, with the dual (contrasting) objective to maximize spectrum efficiency at the network level, while accounting for the perceived quality of the delivered media flows at the client level.
3. A fully distributed, scalable and self-adaptive implementation of the resulting
Active Resource Manager (ARM) is deployed, that explicitly accounts for the energy limits of the battery powered MCs and the effects induced by both fading and client mobility. Due to informationally decentralized architecture of the ActMesh net, the complexity of (possibly, optimal) centralized solutions for resource management becomes prohibitive when number of MCs accessing ActMesh net grow. Furthermore, centralized resource management solutions could required large amounts of time to collect and process the required network information, which, in turn, induce delay that can be unacceptable for delay sensitive media applications, e.g., multimedia streaming. Hence, it is important to develop network-wide ARM policies that are both distributed and scalable by exploiting the radio MCs capabilities to sense, adapt and coordinate themselves.
We validate our analytical models via simulation based numerical tests, that
support actual effectiveness of the overall ActMesh paradigm, both in terms of objective and subjective performance metrics. In particular, the basic tradeoff
among backbone traffic-vs-access traffic arising in the ActMesh net from the bandwidth-efficient opportunistic resource allocation policy pursued by the
deployed ARM is numerically characterized.
The standardization framework we inspire to is the emerging IEEE 802.16h one
ActMesh- A Cognitive Resource Management paradigm for dynamic mobile Internet Access with Reliability Guarantees
Wireless Mesh Networks (WMNs) are going increasing attention as a flexible low-cost networking architecture to provide media Internet access over metropolitan areas to mobile clients requiring multimedia services. In WMNs, Mesh Routers (MRs) from the mesh backbone and accomplish the twofold
task of traffic forwarding, as well as providing multimedia access to mobile Mesh Clients (MCs). Due to the intensive bandwidth-resource requested for supporting QoS-demanding multimedia services, performance of the current WMNs is mainly limited by spectrum-crowding and traffic-congestion, as only scarce spectrum-resources is currently licensed for the MCs' access. In principle, this problem could be mitigated by exploiting in a media-friendly
(e.g., content-aware) way the context-aware capabilities offered by the Cognitive
Radio (CR) paradigm. As integrated exploitation of both content and
context-aware system's capabilities is at the basis of our proposed Active Mesh (ActMesh) networking paradigm. This last aims at defining a network-wide architecture for realizing media-friendly Cognitive Mesh nets (e.g., context aware Cognitive Mesh nets). Hence, main contribution of this work is four fold:
1. After introducing main functional blocks of our ActMesh architecture, suitable self-adaptive Belief Propagation and Soft Data Fusion algorithms are designed to provide context-awareness. This is done under
both cooperative and noncooperative sensing frameworks.
2. The resulting network-wide resource management problem is modelled as a constrained stochastic Network Utility Maximization (NUM) problem, with the dual (contrasting) objective to maximize spectrum efficiency at the network level, while accounting for the perceived quality of the delivered media flows at the client level.
3. A fully distributed, scalable and self-adaptive implementation of the resulting
Active Resource Manager (ARM) is deployed, that explicitly accounts for the energy limits of the battery powered MCs and the effects induced by both fading and client mobility. Due to informationally decentralized architecture of the ActMesh net, the complexity of (possibly, optimal) centralized solutions for resource management becomes prohibitive when number of MCs accessing ActMesh net grow. Furthermore, centralized resource management solutions could required large amounts of time to collect and process the required network information, which, in turn, induce delay that can be unacceptable for delay sensitive media applications, e.g., multimedia streaming. Hence, it is important to develop network-wide ARM policies that are both distributed and scalable by exploiting the radio MCs capabilities to sense, adapt and coordinate themselves.
We validate our analytical models via simulation based numerical tests, that
support actual effectiveness of the overall ActMesh paradigm, both in terms of objective and subjective performance metrics. In particular, the basic tradeoff
among backbone traffic-vs-access traffic arising in the ActMesh net from the bandwidth-efficient opportunistic resource allocation policy pursued by the
deployed ARM is numerically characterized.
The standardization framework we inspire to is the emerging IEEE 802.16h one
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