DocumentCode
2335786
Title
WLC05-4: Game-theoretic Distributed Spectrum Sharing for Wireless Cognitive Networks with Heterogeneous QoS
Author
Jin, Tao ; Chigan, Chunxiao ; Tian, Zhi
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Michigan Technol. Univ., Houghton, MI
fYear
2006
fDate
Nov. 27 2006-Dec. 1 2006
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
Ubiquitous wireless networking calls for efficient dynamic spectrum allocation (DSA) among heterogeneous users with diverse transmission types and bandwidth demands. To meet user-specific quality-of-service (QoS) requirements, the power and spectrum allocated to each user should lie inside a bounded region in order to be meaningful for the targeted application. Most existing DSA methods aim at enhancing the total system utility. As such, spectrum wastage may arise when the system-wise optimal allocation falls outside the desired region for QoS provisioning. The goal of this paper is to develop QoS-aware distributed DSA schemes using the game-theoretic approach. We derive DSA solutions that respect QoS and avoid naively boosting or sacrificing some users\´ utilities to maximize the network spectrum utilization. Specifically, we propose two game-theoretic DSA techniques: one resorts to proper scaling of the transmission power according to each user\´s useful utility range, and the other embeds the QoS factor into the utility function used for dynamic gaming. In addition, we introduce two new metrics to evaluate DSA schemes from a practical QoS perspective, namely "system useful utility" and "fraction of QoS satisfied users." Simulations confirm that the proposed DSA techniques outperform existing QoS-blind game models in terms of spectrum sharing efficiency in heterogeneous networks.
Keywords
cognitive radio; game theory; quality of service; ubiquitous computing; wireless channels; QoS-blind game models; diverse transmission; dynamic spectrum allocation; game-theoretic distributed spectrum sharing; heterogeneous QoS; heterogeneous networks; quality-of-service; system-wise optimal allocation; transmission power scaling; ubiquitous wireless networking calls; wireless cognitive networks; Bandwidth; Boosting; Cognitive radio; Game theory; Interference; Quality of service; Resource management; Signal to noise ratio; Ubiquitous computing; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2006. GLOBECOM '06. IEEE
Conference_Location
San Francisco, CA
ISSN
1930-529X
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0356-1
Electronic_ISBN
1930-529X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GLOCOM.2006.642
Filename
4151272
Link To Document