| Literature DB >> 25903551 |
Sabin Bhandari1, Sangman Moh2.
Abstract
The advancement in electronics, wireless communications and integrated circuits has enabled the development of small low-power sensors and actuators that can be placed on, in or around the human body. A wireless body area network (WBAN) can be effectively used to deliver the sensory data to a central server, where it can be monitored, stored and analyzed. For more than a decade, cognitive radio (CR) technology has been widely adopted in wireless networks, as it utilizes the available spectra of licensed, as well as unlicensed bands. A cognitive radio body area network (CRBAN) is a CR-enabled WBAN. Unlike other wireless networks, CRBANs have specific requirements, such as being able to automatically sense their environments and to utilize unused, licensed spectra without interfering with licensed users, but existing protocols cannot fulfill them. In particular, the medium access control (MAC) layer plays a key role in cognitive radio functions, such as channel sensing, resource allocation, spectrum mobility and spectrum sharing. To address various application-specific requirements in CRBANs, several MAC protocols have been proposed in the literature. In this paper, we survey MAC protocols for CRBANs. We then compare the different MAC protocols with one another and discuss challenging open issues in the relevant research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25903551 PMCID: PMC4431186 DOI: 10.3390/s150409189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Collided packet transmission in cognitive radio (CR)-MAC.
Figure 2Successful packet transmission in CR-MAC.
Figure 3Conceptual operation in cognitive-receiver initiated cycled receiver (C-RICER).
Figure 4Power adaption strategy in C-RICER. RSSI, received signal strength indicator; TxPower, transmission power.
Figure 5Channel switching in C-RICER.
Figure 6Multiband orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (MB-OFDM).
Figure 7System architecture of hybrid cognitive validation platform (HCVP).
Figure 8Adaptive CR-MAC diagram.
Comparison of MAC protocols designed for CRBANs. DCAA, dynamic channel adjustable asynchronous; PU, primary user; MBAN, medical body area network; UWB, ultra-wideband; ECMA, European Computer Manufacturers Association.
| Protocol | Collision ratio | Channel access parameter | Energy consumption | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR-MAC [ | Low | Energy level detection | Low | High throughput. According to the urgency level of the monitored traffic, nodes are assumed to have the capability to dynamically tune their transmitter power. QoS promising for traffic of different priority classes. | No advantage in increasing the number of retransmissions in critical nodes after saturation point. |
| DCAA-MAC [ | Low | Energy level detection | Low | PU protection and QoS provision. Each node goes to sleep and wakes up periodically and independently. | Energy detection is only optimal for detecting unknown signal if the noise power is known. |
| C-RICER [ | Low | RSSI | Low | Use of power adaption before channel adaption is considered. Dynamically adapts both transmission power and channel according to interference level. To reduce the sensing energy, the coordinator of C-RICER periodically senses interference only in the working channel. | Random delay. Rescan cycle should be sufficient to cover the duration of the interference, but sufficiently short to ensure energy efficiency. Thus, the rescan cycle should be adaptively calculated. |
| MBAN MAC [ | Low | UWB radio | Low due to IR-UWB | Adopts the IEEE 802.15.6 for communication in intra-WBAN tiers and ECMA-368 in inter-WBAN tiers. ECMA-368 MAC provides a distributed reservation-based channel access mechanism, as well as prioritized contention-based channel access. |
Neither verified nor evaluated in [ |
| HCVP MAC [ | Low | RSSI | Medium | Realizes practical situations by integrating computer software and hardware devices. Channel estimation is based on both the RSSI measured during the sensing period and the packet collision rate during the WBAN accessing period. | The coordinator broadcasts beacons only when suitable time slots are found ( |