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CR Syllabus

This document outlines the objectives and units of a course on cognitive radio. The course aims to help students understand software defined radio techniques, cognitive radio architecture and standards, and the physical, MAC and network layer design of cognitive radio. It covers topics like cognition cycles, spectrum sensing, dynamic spectrum access, MAC layer design for cognitive radio, and advanced topics such as security, spectrum markets and applications for public safety and IoT. The course has 5 units and aims to provide knowledge of cognitive radio design and develop abilities to implement related algorithms and applications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views1 page

CR Syllabus

This document outlines the objectives and units of a course on cognitive radio. The course aims to help students understand software defined radio techniques, cognitive radio architecture and standards, and the physical, MAC and network layer design of cognitive radio. It covers topics like cognition cycles, spectrum sensing, dynamic spectrum access, MAC layer design for cognitive radio, and advanced topics such as security, spectrum markets and applications for public safety and IoT. The course has 5 units and aims to provide knowledge of cognitive radio design and develop abilities to implement related algorithms and applications.

Uploaded by

hac ker
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EC8071 COGNITIVE RADIO L T P C

3 0 0 3
OBJECTIVES:
The student should be made:
 To understand the evolving software defined radio and cognitive radio techniques and
their essential functionalities
 To study the basic architecture and standard for cognitive radio
 To understand the physical, MAC and Network layer design of cognitive radio
 To expose the student to evolving applications and advanced features of cognitive radio

UNIT I INTRODUCTION TO SOFTWARE-DEFINED RADIO AND COGNITIVE


RADIO 9
Evolution of Software Defined Radio and Cognitive radio: goals, benefits, definitions, architectures,
relations with other radios, issues, enabling technologies, radio frequency spectrum and
regulations.

UNIT II COGNITIVE RADIO ARCHITECTURE 9


Cognition cycle – orient, plan, decide and act phases, Organization, SDR as a platform for
Cognitive Radio – Hardware and Software Architectures, Overview of IEEE 802.22 standard for
broadband wireless access in TV bands.

UNIT III SPECTRUM SENSING AND DYNAMIC SPECTRUM ACCESS 9


Introduction – Primary user detection techniques – energy detection, feature detection, matched
filtering, cooperative detection and other approaches, Fundamental Tradeoffs in spectrum sensing,
Spectrum Sharing Models of Dynamic Spectrum Access - Unlicensed and Licensed Spectrum
Sharing, Fundamental Limits of Cognitive Radio.

UNIT IV MAC AND NETWORK LAYER DESIGN FOR COGNITIVE RADIO 9


MAC for cognitive radios – Polling, ALOHA, slotted ALOHA, CSMA, CSMA / CA, Network layer
design – routing in cognitive radios, flow control and error control techniques.

UNIT V ADVANCED TOPICS IN COGNITIVE RADIO 9


Overview of security issues in cognitive radios, auction based spectrum markets in cognitive radio
networks, public safety and cognitive radio, cognitive radio for Internet of Things.
TOTAL: 45 PERIODS
OUTCOMES:
At the end of the course, the student should be able to:
 Gain knowledge on the design principles on software defined radio and cognitive radio
 Develop the ability to design and implement algorithms for cognitive radio spectrum sensing
and dynamic spectrum access
 Build experiments and projects with real time wireless applications
 Apply the knowledge of advanced features of cognitive radio for real world applications

TEXT BOOKS:
1. Alexander M. Wyglinski, Maziar Nekovee, Thomas Hou, ―Cognitive Radio Communications
and Networks‖, Academic Press, Elsevier, 2010. (Unit I to IV)
2. Huseyin Arslan (Ed.), ―Cognitive Radio, Software Defined Radio, and Adaptive Wireless
Systems, Springer, 2007. (Unit V)

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