Cognitive radio
A cognitive radio (CR) is a radio that can be programmed and configured dynamically
to use the best wireless channels in
its vicinity to avoid user interference and congestion. Such a radio
automatically detects available channels in wireless
spectrum, then accordingly changes its transmission or reception parameters to allow more concurrent wireless
communications in a given spectrum band at one
location. This process is a form of dynamic spectrum
management..
Description
In
response to the operator's commands, the cognitive engine is capable of
configuring radio-system parameters. These parameters include "waveform,
protocol, operating frequency, and networking". This functions as an
autonomous unit in the communications environment, exchanging information about
the environment with the networks it accesses and other cognitive radios (CRs).
A CR "monitors its own performance continuously", in addition to
"reading the radio's outputs"; it then uses this information to
"determine the RF environment, channel conditions, link
performance, etc.", and adjusts the "radio's settings to deliver the
required quality of service subject to an appropriate combination of user
requirements, operational limitations, and regulatory constraints".
Some
"smart radio" proposals combine wireless mesh network dynamically
changing the path messages take between two given nodes using cooperative
diversity; cognitive radio—dynamically changing the frequency band used by
messages between two consecutive nodes on the path; and software-defined
radio—dynamically changing the protocol used by message between two consecutive
nodes.
History
The concept of cognitive radio
was first proposed by Joseph Mitola III in a seminar at KTH (the
Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm) in 1998 and published in an article
by Mitola and Gerald Q. Maguire, Jr. in 1999. It was a novel approach in
wireless communications, which Mitola later described as:
The point in which
wireless personal digital assistants (PDAs) and the related networks
are sufficiently computationally intelligent about radio resources and related
computer-to-computer communications to detect user communications needs as a
function of use context, and to provide radio resources and wireless services
most appropriate to those needs.
Cognitive radio is considered
as a goal towards which a software-defined radio platform should
evolve: a fully reconfigurable wireless transceiver which automatically adapts
its communication parameters to network and user demands.
Traditional
regulatory structures have been built for an analog model and are not optimized
for cognitive radio. Regulatory bodies in the world (including the Federal
Communication Commission in the United States and Ofcom in the
United Kingdom) as well as different independent measurement campaigns found
that most radio frequency spectrum was inefficiently utilized. Cellular
network bands are overloaded in most parts of the world, but other frequency
bands (such as military, and paging frequencies) are
insufficiently utilized. Independent studies performed in some countries
confirmed that observation, and concluded that spectrum utilization depends on
time and place. Moreover, fixed spectrum allocation prevents rarely used
frequencies (those assigned to specific services) from being used, even when
any unlicensed users would not cause noticeable interference to the assigned
service. Regulatory bodies in the world have been considering whether to allow
unlicensed users in licensed bands if they would not cause any interference to
licensed users. These initiatives have focused cognitive-radio research
on dynamic spectrum access.
The
first cognitive radio wireless regional area network standard, IEEE 802.22,
was developed by IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standard Committee (LMSC) and published
in 2011. This standard uses geolocation and spectrum sensing for spectral
awareness. Geolocation combines with a database of licensed transmitters in
the area to identify available channels for use by the cognitive radio network.
Spectrum sensing observes the spectrum and identifies occupied channels. IEEE
802.22 was designed to utilize the unused frequencies or fragments of time in a
location. This white space is unused television channels in the geolocated
areas. However, cognitive radio cannot occupy the same unused space all the
time. As spectrum availability changes, the network adapts to prevent
interference with licensed transmissions.
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