Title :
Adaption Overhead in Time-Varying Cognitive Radio Channels
Author :
Clancy, T. Charles
Author_Institution :
US Dept. of Defense, Fort Meade
Abstract :
The ability to adapt to a changing RF environment is a major feature of cognitive radios. As the interference and noise characteristics change, the radio should be able to select a waveform optimal for a particular scenario. However, more frequent adaptation requires more frequent distribution of radio parameters, increasing the overhead and decreasing available proportion of capacity for transmitting data. This paper presents a basic model for analyzing modulation adaption overhead in a point-to-point cognitive radio link, and simulates a few specific cases of interest. We examine how quickly a radio can adapt without that overhead actually causing worse overall performance. Our major results are as follows: to decrease overhead cognitive engines should be placed at receivers, not transmitters; modulation adaptation in Rayleigh fading environments is only beneficial under high-SNR conditions; the higher the average SNR, the more frequently we can adapt to fading channels and see rate gains; and adaptation to interference channels offers a significant performance gain.
Keywords :
Rayleigh channels; cognitive radio; quadrature amplitude modulation; radio links; radiofrequency interference; time-varying channels; M-QAM channels; Rayleigh fading environment; interference channel; modulation adaption overhead; performance gain; point-to-point cognitive radio link; time-varying cognitive radio channel; Analytical models; Cognitive radio; Engines; Interference; Performance gain; Radio frequency; Radio transmitters; Rayleigh channels; Receivers; Working environment noise;
Conference_Titel :
Consumer Communications and Networking Conference, 2008. CCNC 2008. 5th IEEE
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1456-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1457-4
DOI :
10.1109/ccnc08.2007.231