Using TV Receiver Information to Increase Cognitive White Space Spectrum
Brage Ellings{\ae}ter, Hemdan Bezabih, Josef Noll, Torleiv Maseng

TL;DR
This paper explores how using TV receiver location data can enable cognitive radios to operate more efficiently within TV broadcast areas, especially in rural regions, by avoiding interference and increasing available spectrum.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach of utilizing TV receiver registration information to improve spectrum sharing for cognitive radios within TV service areas.
Findings
Significant increase in exploitable frequencies in rural areas
TV receiver data reduces harmful interference risks
Simulation results based on Norwegian statistics support the approach
Abstract
In this paper we investigate the usage of cognitive radio devices within the service area of TV broadcast stations. Until now the main approach for a cognitive radio to operate in the TV bands has been to register TV broadcast stations locations and thus protecting the broadcast stations service area. Through information about TV receivers location, we show that a cognitive radio should be able to operate within this service area without causing harmful interference to the TV receivers as defined by Ofcom and FCC. We provide simulations based on real statistics from Norway that show that especially in rural areas TV receiver registration can provide a substantial gain in terms of exploitable frequencies for a cognitive radio.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCognitive Radio Networks and Spectrum Sensing · Advanced Adaptive Filtering Techniques · Power Line Communications and Noise
