Many cognitive radio schemes being developed today rely on spectrum etiquettes to maintain quality of service for their users, and to control impact on primary users. The purpose of this project is to develop Cognitive Radio (CR) techniques that will deliver increased robustness to interference without the need to wholly rely on spectrum etiquettes to control interference. This activity will develop suitable reactive ‘move if interfered’ assignment strategies.
The project will take ideas from frequency hopping spread spectrum and IEEE802.22 (that uses CR and is currently being standardised). While actively in communication, continuous proactive monitoring of spectrum will be performed, possibly using a second receiver, and will determine the most suitable channels to rapidly jump to if subject to excessive interference on the current assignments. This will also be linked with opportunistic scheduling and suitable buffering to better exploit fluctuations in the amount of bandwidth available, and to maintain apparent connectivity. These strategies will be applied to mixed wireless network architectures, incorporating high altitude platform, ad hoc and cellular terrestrial nodes.
A mixture of simulation and analysis will be used to assess performance, and it is expected that game theory and Markov analysis will be particularly important analytical tools. This work will integrate closely with other activities within the Group.
Members
- Hai Bin Li
- David Grace
- Paul Mitchell
Dates
- October 2007 to
September 2011
Research