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What is Cooperative Spectrum Sensing (CSS)

Handbook of Research on Software-Defined and Cognitive Radio Technologies for Dynamic Spectrum Management
Spectrum sensing is a key function of cognitive radio to prevent the harmful interference with licensed users and identify the available spectrum for improving the spectrum's utilization. However, detection performance in practice is often compromised with multipath fading, shadowing and receiver uncertainty issues. To mitigate the impact of these issues, cooperative spectrum sensing has been shown to be an effective method to improve the detection performance by exploiting spatial diversity. Here CR users cooperate with each other in trying to detect licensed transmissions.
Published in Chapter:
Fundamentals of Software Defined Radio and Cooperative Spectrum Sensing: A Step Ahead of Cognitive Radio Networks
Jyoti Sekhar Banerjee (Bengal Institute of Technology, India) and Arpita Chakraborty (Bengal Institute of Technology, India)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-6571-2.ch019
Abstract
Software Defined Radio (SDR) and Cognitive Radio (CR) are the key enabling technologies to overcome the spectrum scarcity problem a bit, by supporting dynamic spectrum access in which either a network or a wireless node reconfigures its transmission or reception parameters to communicate efficiently, avoiding interference with licensed or unlicensed users. CR senses the environment and enables a secondary system to share the licensed spectrum with the primary system, which usually has exclusive access. The performance of the secondary system could be enhanced by Cooperative Spectrum Sensing (CSS) as it increases the primary detection probability. Again cognitive radio network greatly benefits from a cooperative transmission, employing intermediate nodes as relays. This chapter is focused on software defined radio, its architecture, limitations, then evolution to cognitive radio network, architecture of the CR, and its relevance in the wireless and mobile ad-hoc networks. Additionally, an overview of Cooperative Spectrum Sensing (CSS), its classification, components, challenges, and Cooperative Relay are discussed.
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