Abstract

Software radios are emerging as platforms for multiband multimode personal communications systems. Radio etiquette is the set of RF bands, air interfaces, protocols, and spatial and temporal patterns that moderate the use of the radio spectrum. Cognitive radio extends the software radio with radio-domain model-based reasoning about such etiquettes. Cognitive radio enhances the flexibility of personal services through a radio knowledge representation language. This language represents knowledge of radio etiquette, devices, software modules, propagation, networks, user needs, and application scenarios in a way that supports automated reasoning about the needs of the user. This empowers software radios to conduct expressive negotiations among peers about the use of radio spectrum across fluents of space, time, and user context. With RKRL, cognitive radio agents may actively manipulate the protocol stack to adapt known etiquettes to better satisfy the user's needs. This transforms radio nodes from blind executors of predefined protocols to radio-domain-aware intelligent agents that search out ways to deliver the services the user wants even if that user does not know how to obtain them. Software radio provides an ideal platform for the realization of cognitive radio.

Keywords

Cognitive radioComputer scienceSoftware-defined radioRadio-frequency engineeringProtocol stackComputer networkRemote radio headTelecommunicationsWireless

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
6
Issue
4
Pages
13-18
Citations
9058
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

9058
OpenAlex

Cite This

Joseph Mitola, Gerald Q. Maguire (1999). Cognitive radio: making software radios more personal. IEEE Personal Communications , 6 (4) , 13-18. https://doi.org/10.1109/98.788210

Identifiers

DOI
10.1109/98.788210