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Public Safety Communications: Enhancement Through Cognitive Radio and Spectrum Sharing Principles
45
Citations
5
References
2012
Year
Wireless CommunicationsEngineeringWireless Emergency SystemPublic Safety CommunicationsCommunicationWireless Communications TechnologiesSpectrum SensingDynamic Spectrum ManagementDisaster Relief SituationsCognitive RadioCognitive NetworkMobile ComputingCognitive Radio Resource ManagementSignal ProcessingEmergency ScenariosSpectrum ManagementPublic Safety NetworksSpectrum Sharing PrinciplesSpectrum Sharing
Wireless communications are essential for emergency and disaster relief, yet existing public safety networks often lack capacity to meet the high traffic demands of critical situations. The article aims to explore dimensions that increase capacity in emergency scenarios, focusing on spectrum sharing as a key approach. The authors develop a comprehensive view of spectrum‑sharing models for emergency communications, outlining key principles, illustrating applicability with examples, and highlighting cognitive radio as a major enabler while assessing each model’s feasibility. The study demonstrates that cognitive radio technology is a major enabler for spectrum‑sharing models in emergency communications, with key principles and illustrative examples supporting their applicability.
Wireless communications technologies play an irreplaceable role in emergency and disaster relief situations. It is generally acknowledged that the existing public safety (PS) wireless communications facilities frequently fall short of meeting users' needs in many critical situations. Emergency scenarios usually lead to exceptionally high traffic loads, and the lack of network capacity is one of the major limitations to overcome. In this context, this article first discusses about several dimensions that enable increased capacity in emergency scenarios, and then the attention is placed on the role of spectrum sharing as one of these key dimensions. In this regard, a comprehensive view of possible spectrum-sharing models for emergency communications is developed. The key principles underlying each sharing model are given, and its applicability is described through illustrative examples, where it is made evident that cognitive radio (CR) technology constitutes a major technological enabler for their realization. Finally, a discussion on the feasibility of each of the spectrum sharing models is addressed.
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