articleDec 10, 2005Closed access

Collaborative spectrum sensing for opportunistic access in fading environments

University of Toronto

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Traditionally, frequency spectrum is licensed to users by government agencies in a fixed manner where licensee has exclusive right to access the allocated band. This policy has been de jure practice to protect systems from mutual interference for many years. However, with increasing demand for the spectrum and scarcity of vacant bands, a spectrum policy reform seems inevitable. Meanwhile, recent measurements suggest the possibility of sharing spectrum among different parties subject to interference-protection constraints. In this paper we study spectrum-sharing between a primary licensee and a group of secondary users. In order to enable access to unused licensed spectrum, a secondary user has to monitor…

Citation impact

1,802
total citations
FWCI
52.29
Percentile
100%
References
16
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Licensee
  • Fading
  • Computer science
  • Spectrum management
  • Interference (communication)
  • Radio spectrum
  • Telecommunications
  • Government (linguistics)
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