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Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing and White Space Access
Holland, Oliver
Bogucka, Hanna
Medeisis, Arturas
Details the paradigms of opportunistic spectrum sharing andwhite space access as effective means to satisfy increasing demandfor high–speed wireless communication and for novel wirelesscommunication applicationsThis book addresses opportunistic spectrum sharing and whitespace access, being particularly mindful of practicalconsiderations and solutions. In Part I, spectrum sharingimplementation issues are considered in terms of hardware platformsand software architectures for realization of flexible andspectrally agile transceivers. Part II addresses practicalmechanisms supporting spectrum sharing, including spectrum sensingfor opportunistic spectrum access, machine learning and decisionmaking capabilities, aggregation of spectrum opportunities, andspectrally–agile radio waveforms. Part III presents the ongoing work on policy and regulation forefficient and reliable spectrum sharing, including major recentsteps forward in TV White Space (TVWS) regulation and associatedgeolocation database approaches, policy management aspects, andnovel licensing schemes supporting spectrum sharing. In Part IV,business and economic aspects of spectrum sharing are considered,including spectrum value modeling, discussion of issues arounddisruptive innovation that are pertinent to opportunistic spectrumsharing and white space access, and business benefits assessment ofthe novel spectrum sharing regulatory proposal Licensed SharedAccess. Part V discusses deployments of opportunistic spectrumsharing and white space access solutions in practice, includingwork on TVWS system implementations, standardization activities,and development and testing of systems according to thestandards. Discusses aspects of pioneering standards such as the IEEE802.22 Wi–Far standard, the IEEE 802.11af White–Fi standard, the IEEE Dynamic Spectrum AccessNetworks Standards Committee standards, and the ETSIReconfiguration Radio Systems standards Investigates regulatory and regulatory–linked solutionsassisting opportunistic spectrum sharing and white space access,including geo–location database approaches and licensingenhancements Covers the pricing and value of spectrum, the economic effectsand potentials of such technologies, and provides detailed businessassessments of some particularly innovative regulatoryproposals The flexible and efficient use of radio frequencies is necessary tocater for the increasing data traffic demand worldwide. This bookaddresses this necessity through its extensive coverage ofopportunistic spectrum sharing and white space accesssolutions. Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing and White Space Access: ThePractical Reality is a great resource fortelecommunication engineers, researchers, and students . INDICE: Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing and White Space Access: The Practical Reality .Edited by: .Oliver Holland, King s College London, UKHanna Bogucka, Poznan University of Technology, PolandArturas Medeisis, Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Lithuania.Table of Contents .Introduction Oliver Holland, King s College London, UK Hanna Bogucka, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Arturas Medeisis, Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, LithuaniaPart I: Flexible Radio Hardware and Software Platforms Supporting Spectrum Sharing.Chapter 1. The Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) Family of Low–cost SDRs Matt Ettus, Ettus Research, USA Martin Braun, Ettus Research, USAChapter 2. On the GNU Radio Ecosystem Tom Rondeau, Rondeau Research, USA.Chapter 3. The Wireless Open–Access Research Platform (WARP) for Flexible Radio Petri Mahonen, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Junaid Ansari, RWTH Aachen University, Germany.Chapter 4. A Dynamically Reconfigurable Software Radio Framework – Iris Author: Paul Sutton, Trinity College Dublin/CTVR, Ireland.Chapter 5. OpenAirInterface and ExpressMIMO2 for Spectrally Agile Communication Bassem Zayen, Eurecom, France Florian Kaltenberger, Eurecom, France Raymond Knopp, Eurecom, France.Chapter 6. CORAL Cognitive WiFi Networking System: Case Studies of Rural Applications in India John Sydor, Communications Research Centre, Canada.Part II: Practical Mechanisms Supporting Spectrum Sharing.Chapter 7. Cooperative Sensing of Spectrum Opportunities Giuseppe Caso, University of Rome La Sapienza , Italy Luca De Nardis, University of Rome La Sapienza , Italy Ragnar Thobaben, Royal Institute of Technology – KTH, Sweden Maria Gabriella Di Benedetto, University of Rome La Sapienza , Italy.Chapter 8. A Machine–Learning Approach Based on Bio–Inspired Intelligence Dimitrios Karvounas, University of Piraeus, Greece Aimilia Bantouna, University of Piraeus, Greece Andreas Georgakopoulos, University of Piraeus, Greece Kostas Tsagkaris, University of Piraeus, Greece Vera Stavroulaki, University of Piraeus, Greece Panagiotis Demestichas, University of Piraeus, Greece.Chapter 9. Spectrally Agile Waveforms Alexander Wyglinski, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Adrian Kliks, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Pawel Kryszkiewicz, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Amit P. Sail, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA Hanna Bogucka, Poznan University of Technology, Poland.Chapter 10. Aggregation of Spectrum Opportunities Florian Kaltenberger, Eurecom, France Theodoros A. Tsiftsis, Industrial Systems Institute, Greece Fotis Foukalas, Industrial Systems Institute, Greece Shuyu Ping, King s College London, UK Oliver Holland, King s College London, UK.Chapter 11. Policies for Efficient Spectrum Sharing Liljana Gavrilovska, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Republic of Macedonia Vladimir Atanasovski, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Republic of Macedonia Gianmarco Baldini, European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Italy. Part III: Regulatory Solutions for Spectrum Sharing .Chapter 12. International Regulatory Framework for Spectrum and Spectrum Sharing Peter Anker, Ministry of Economic Affairs, Netherlands. Chapter 13. Regulations for Spectrum Sharing in the USA Lee Pucker, Wireless Innovation Forum, USA. Chapter 14. UK Framework for Access to TV White Spaces Reza Karimi, Office of Communications (Ofcom), UK. Chapter 15. Spectrum Sharing using Geo–location Databases Jeff Schmidt, Spectrum Bridge, USA Peter Stanforth, Spectrum Bridge, USA. Chapter 16. Novel Licensing Schemes Oliver Holland, King s College London, UK Arturo Basaure, Aalto University, Finland Wataru Yamada, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, Japan. Part IV: Spectrum Sharing Business Scenarios and Economic Considerations. Chapter 17. Economic and Game Theoretic Models for Spectrum Pricing Hamed Ahmadi, Trinity College Dublin/CTVR, Ireland Irene Macaluso, Trinity College Dublin/CTVR, Ireland Zaheer Kahn, University of Oulu, Finland Hanna Bogucka, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Luiz Da Silva, Trinity College Dublin/CTVR, Ireland.Chapter 18. Business Benefits of Licensed Shared Access (LSA) for Key Stakeholders Marja Matinmikko, VTT Technical Research Centre, Finland Hanna Okkonen, Oulu Business School, Finland Seppo Yrjölä, Nokia, Finland Vânia Gonçalves, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium Anri Kivimäki, Oulu Business School, Finland Esko Luttinen, University of Oulu, Finland Jukka Kemppainen, EXFO, Finland.Chapter 19. Initial Standardisation of Disruptive Innovations in Radiocommunication Technology in Consortia Dirk–Oliver von der Emden, Swiss Federal Office of Communications (OFCOM), Switzerland. Chapter 20. Spectrum as a Platform: A Critical Assessment of the Value Promise of Spectrum Sharing Solutions Olivier Rits, iMinds, Belgium Simon Delaere, iMinds, Belgium Pieter Ballon, iMinds, Belgium.Part V: Spectrum Sharing Deployment Scenarios in Practice.Chapter 21. TV White Spaces with Geo–location Database Access: Practical Considerations and Trials in Europe Rogério Pais Dionisio, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal José Ribeiro, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal Jorge Ribeiro, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal Paulo Marques, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal Jonathan Rodriguez, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal. Chapter 22. Developments and Practical Field Trials of TV White Space Technologies Kentaro Ishizu, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Keiichi Mizutani, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Takeshi Matsumura, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Ha–Nguyen Tran, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Stanislav Filin, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Hirokazu Sawada, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Hiroshi Harada, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan.Chapter 23. Cognitive Wireless Regional Area Network Standard: Enabling Cost–Effective Wireless Access, Backhaul and Middle Mile Solution using Spectrum Sharing and Opportunistic Spectrum Access Apurva Mody, BAE Systems, USA Gerald Chouinard, Communications Research Centre, Canada Stephen J. Shellhammer, Qualcomm, Inc., USA Monisha Ghosh, InterDigital, Canada Dave Cavalcanti, Philips Research, USA.Chapter 24. ETSI Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing Technology for (TV) White Spaces Markus Dominik Mueck, Intel Mobile Communications, Germany Naotaka Sato, Sony, Japan Chen Sun, Sony, China Martino Freda, InterDigital, Canada Pekka Ojanen, InterDigital, Finland Dong Zhou, ZTE, China Junfeng Xiao, Huawei, China Rogério Pais Dionisio, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal Paulo Marques, Instituto de Telecomunicações, Portugal.Chapter 25. The IEEE Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks Standards Committee (DySPAN–SC) and IEEE 1900 Working Groups Oliver Holland, King s College London, UK Hiroshi Harada Kyoto University, and National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Ha–Nguyen Tran, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Bernd Bochow, Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany Masayuki Ariyoshi, NEC Corporation, Japan Matthew Sherman, BAE Systems, USA Michael Gundlach, Nokia Solutions and Networks, Germany Stanislav Filin, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan Adrian Kliks, Poznan University of Technology, Poland. Chapter 26. Spectrum to Unlash Machine–to–Machine Uptake Mischa Dohler, King s College London, UK Yue Gao, Queen Mary University of London, UK.Conclusions and Future Work Oliver Holland, King s College London, UK Hanna Bogucka, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Arturas Medeisis, Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Lithuania
- ISBN: 978-1-118-89374-6
- Editorial: Wiley–Blackwell
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 752
- Fecha Publicación: 29/05/2015
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés