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Resource Allocation in Traditional and Cooperative Cognitive Radio Networks

Cognitive radio (CR) is a promising technique to improve spectrum efficiency for wireless communications. This thesis focuses on the resource allocation in two kinds of CR networks (CRNs), traditional CRNs (TCRNs) and cooperative CRNs (CCRNs). In TCRNs, CR sources and destinations communicate directly. By exploring the heterogeneity among CRs, a prioritized CSMA/CA is proposed for demand-matching spectrum allocation. A distributed game is formulated and no-regret learning is adopted to solve the game. Simulation results indicate increase on the number of satisfied CRs. In CCRNs, some nodes are selected as relays to assist the communication. A two-layer auction game is proposed with the first layer performing spectrum allocation and relay formation, and the second layer performing relay allocation. These two layers interact and jointly solve the resource allocation problem. Simulation results show that, compared to counterparts, both the network throughput and convergence time can be improved.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MANITOBA/oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/4842
Date06 September 2011
CreatorsCui, Shaohang
ContributorsCai, Jun (Electrical and Computer Engineering), Alfa, Attahiru (Electrical and Computer Engineering) Wang, Quan (Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering)
Source SetsUniversity of Manitoba Canada
Detected LanguageEnglish

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