Spectrum sensing is an essential functionality that enables cognitive radios
to detect spectral holes and opportunistically use under-utilized frequency
bands without causing harmful interference to primary networks. Since
individual cognitive radios might not be able to reliably detect weak primary
signals due to channel fading/shadowing, this paper proposes a cooperative
wideband spectrum sensing scheme, referred to as spatial-spectral joint
detection, which is based on a linear combination of the local statistics from
spatially distributed multiple cognitive radios. The cooperative sensing
problem is formulated into an optimization problem, for which suboptimal but
efficient solutions can be obtained through mathematical transformation under
practical conditions.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 2008 IEEE International
Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, Las Vegas, NV, March
30-April 4, 200