Cooperative spectrum sensing (CSS) can solve the problem of hidden terminal in cognitive radio (CR). CSS can be employed in two ways distributed and centralised. In wireless networking, clustering can… Click to show full abstract
Cooperative spectrum sensing (CSS) can solve the problem of hidden terminal in cognitive radio (CR). CSS can be employed in two ways distributed and centralised. In wireless networking, clustering can provide network scalability, better resource allocation, and energy efficiency. Here, cluster-based distributed CSS is investigated over Nakagami channel. In the proposed scheme, four fusion policies OR–OR, OR–AND, AND–OR, and AND–AND are investigated. An analytical framework has been presented to evaluate different parameters related to spectrum sensing, i.e. detection probability, false alarm probability, and missed detection probability for Nakagami fading channel. On the basis of the developed framework, the performance of cluster-based distributed CSS has been compared with the centralised CSS. Results show that OR–OR fusion rule of the cluster-based distributed CSS outperforms other fusion rules and centralised CSS. To achieve 80% probability of detection, SNR required is 10 dB for other fusion schemes. Further performance improvement is achieved by using square law selection and maximum ratio combining diversity schemes.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.