cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio aminmohammad roozgard

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Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

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Page 1: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio

Aminmohammad Roozgard

Page 2: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Users

• Primary User (PU)• Secondary User (SU)• Cognitive Radio(CR)

Page 3: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Definition

• Probability of False alarm:– probability of a CR user declaring that a PU is

present when the spectrum is actually free • Probability of detection:– probability of a CR user declaring that a PU is

present when the spectrum is indeed occupied by the PU

faP

DP

Page 4: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

objectives

• CR users should not cause harmful interference to PUs by either switching to an available band or limiting its interference with PUs at an acceptable level

• CR users should efficiently identify and exploit the spectrum holes for required throughput and quality-of-service (QoS)

Page 5: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Sensing problems

• multipath fading• Shadowing• the receiver uncertainty problem

Page 6: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Why cooperation

• enhance the sensing performance by using the spatial diversity in the observations of spatially located CR users (detection performance cannot be improved by increasing the sensitivity, when the SNR of PU signals is below a

certain level)

Page 7: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Gain vs Overhead

• Cooperation Gain– performance improvement due to spatial diversity

• Cooperation Overhead – any extra sensing time, delay, energy, and operations

devoted to cooperative sensing compared to the individual (non-cooperative) spectrum sensing case

– any performance degradation in correlated shadowing or the vulnerability to security attacks

Page 8: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Main questions

• How can cognitive radios cooperate? (cooperation methods)

• How much can be gained from cooperation? (cooperation gain)

• What is the overhead associated with cooperation? (cooperation overhead)

Page 9: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Signal detection

Page 10: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Cooperation categories

a) Centralizedb) Distributedc) Relay-assisted

Page 11: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Channels

• Sensing channel: – selected licensed channel where a physical point-

to-point link between the PU transmitter and each cooperating CR user for observing the primary signal

• Reporting channel:– For data reporting, all CR users are tuned to a

control channel where a physical point-to-point link between each cooperating CR user and the FC for sending the sensing results

Page 12: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Centralized Cooperation

• the Fusion Center (FC) selects achannel for sensing and instructsall cooperating CR users to individually perform local sensing

• all cooperating CR users report their sensing results via the control channel

• the FC combines the received local sensing information, determines the presence of PUs, and diffuses the decision back to cooperating CR users

Page 13: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Distributed Cooperation

• does not rely on a FC for making the cooperative decision

• CR users communicate among themselves and converge to a unified decision on the presence or absence of PUs – by iterations – based on a distributed algorithm, each CR user

• sends its own sensing data to other users• combines its data with the received data• decides whether or not the PU is present• sends its decision• repeat until converge

Page 14: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Relay-assist cooperation

• both sensing channel and report channel are not perfect– a CR user observing a weak sensing channel and a

strong report channel – a CR user with a strong sensing channel and a weak

report channel• CRs can complement and

cooperate with each other toimprove the performance of cooperative sensing

Page 15: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Cooperation steps

• Local sensing• Reporting• Data Fusion

Page 16: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Elements of cooperation

• Cooperation models:how CRs cooperate for sensing

– parallel fusion network models – game theoretical models

• Sensing techniquestaking observation samples

Page 17: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Elements of cooperation

• Hypothesis testinga statistical test to determine the presence or absence of a PU.

– individually by each cooperating user – performed by the fusion center

• Control channel and reporting concernshow the sensing results can be efficiently and reliably reported

– bandwidth-limited– fading-susceptible control channel

Page 18: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Elements of cooperation• Data fusion:

process of combining the reported shared sensing results – signal combining techniques – decision fusion rules

• User selection:how to optimally select the cooperating CRs– maximize the cooperative gain – minimize the cooperation overhead

• Knowledge base stores the information of sensing– improve the detection performance– a priori knowledge – knowledge accumulated through the experience.

Page 19: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Cooperation models

• Parallel fusion model– sensing

• Game theoretical models– Cooperation

Page 20: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Sensing Technique

• Wide band• Narrow band

• Coherent– Using prior knowledge

• Non coherent– No prior knowledge

Page 21: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Sensing Technique

• Energy detection – Long sensing time– depend on noise– No distinguish between PU & SU

• Cyclostationary feature detection– High computational complexity– Long sensing time

• Compressed sensing– Hardware

Page 22: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Hypothesis testing

• Binary hypothesis testing– Likelihood ratio test (LRT)

– Bayes test

• Composite hypothesis testing• Sequential testing

– Two thresholds

Page 23: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Control channel

• Bandwidth requirement– Censoring

• reduces the unnecessary reporting and the usage of control channel bandwidth

– Fixed bands– Dynamic bands

• Reliability requirement– perfect error-free control channel– Gaussian noise– multipath fading– correlated shadowing

Page 24: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Data Fusion• Soft combining

– complete local test statistics– Best Result– Methods:

• Equal gain combining (EGC)• Maximal ratio combining (MRC)

• Quantized soft combining– Only the quantized data for soft combining

• Hard combining– users make a local decision and transmit the one bit decision– Less channel bandwidth– Methods:

• And• Or• Majority

Page 25: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

User Selection

• independent CR users for cooperation can improve the robustness of sensing results

• removing malicious users• Methods:– Centralized selection

– Cluster-based selection

Page 26: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Knowledge base

• Rules– enhance the detection performance

• Accumulated knowledge• Learned experience

– alleviate the burden of cooperative sensing • retrieving the spectrum information

– list of PU-occupied channels from the database.

• Approaches– radio environment map (REM)– received signal strength (RSS) profiles– Channel gain map – power spectral density (PSD) map

Page 27: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

gain and overhead

• sensing time and delay– Number of samples– Collision on report Channel– Relay data*– Synchronization*

• channel impairments– Multipath fading and shadowing– Spatially correlated shadowing

• having a small number of CR users over a large distance may be more effective than a large number of closely located users

Page 28: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

gain and overhead

• energy efficiency– Censoring Users– Sleeping– Optimal sensing time*– Optimal number of CRs*

• cooperation efficiency– Sensing scheduling*– Speed of converge*

• Mobility– PU mobility*– SU mobility

Page 29: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

gain and overhead

• Security– Data falsification

• Anomaly detection*

– Attacks• PU emulation attack• Control channel jamming• Node capture attack*

• wideband sensing– Multi-band cooperative sensing*– Wideband cooperative sensing*

Page 30: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

?

Page 31: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Example

Page 32: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Reference

• Akyildiz, Ian F., Brandon F. Lo, and Ravikumar Balakrishnan. "Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio networks: A survey." Physical Communication 4, no. 1 (2011): 40-62.

Page 33: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard
Page 34: Cooperative spectrum sensing in cognitive radio Aminmohammad Roozgard

Example

• Movement