1、 IEEE Standard Definitions and Concepts for Dynamic Spectrum Access: Terminology Relating to Emerging Wireless Networks, System Functionality, and Spectrum Management Amendment 1: Addition of New Terms and Associated DefinitionsSponsored by the Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks Standards Committee (D
2、ySPAN-SC) IEEE 3 Park Avenue New York, NY 10016-5997 USA 25 January 2013 IEEE Communications Society IEEE Std 1900.1a-2012(Amendment to IEEE Std 1900.1-2008) IEEE Std 1900.1a-2012 (Amendment to IEEE Std 1900.1-2008) IEEE Standard Definitions and Concepts for Dynamic Spectrum Access: Terminology Rela
3、ting to Emerging Wireless Networks, System Functionality, and Spectrum Management Amendment 1: Addition of New Terms and Associated Definitions Sponsor Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks Standards Committee (DySPAN-SC) of the IEEE Communications Society Approved 5 December 2012 IEEE-SA Standards Board
4、 Abstract: An amendment to the published IEEE Std 1900.1-2008 to add new terms and definitions. Keywords: cognitive radio, cognitive radio networks, dynamic spectrum access, IEEE 1900.1, policy-based radio, software-controlled radio, software-defined radio, spectrum management The Institute of Elect
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19、013 IEEE. All rights reserved. vi Participants At the time this IEEE standard was completed, the 1900.1 Working Group had the following membership: Bernd Bochow, Chair Oliver Holland, Vice Chair and Technical Editor Michael Gundlach, Secretary Yohannes D. Alemseged Masayuki Ariyoshi Stanislav Filin
20、Yuming Ge Lynn Grande Hiroshi Harada James Hoffmeyer Thomas Kurihara Venkatesha Prasad Leonard Pucker Maximilian Riegel Chen Sun Darcy Swain-Walsh Ha Nguyen Tran The following members of the individual balloting committee voted on this standard. Balloters may have voted for approval, disapproval, or
21、 abstention. Thomas Alexander Mohammed Saud Al-Juaid Mark Anderson Masayuki Ariyoshi Harry Bims Riccardo Brama Vern Brethour Bill Brown Edgar Brown Mark Bushnell William Byrd William Carney Juan Carreon Dave Cavalcanti Yi-Ming Chen Keith Chow Charles Cook Yohannes Demessie Alistair Duffy Richard Eck
22、ard Marc Emmelmann Avraham Freedman Alexander Gelman H. Glickenstein Patrick Gonia Sudheer Grandhi Randall Groves Michael Gundlach Rainer Hach Mark Hamilton Jerome Henry Marco Hernandez Dien Hoang Werner Hoelzl James Hoffmeyer Oliver Holland Victor Hou David Hunter Tetsushi Ikegami Noriyuki Ikeuchi
23、Sergiu Iordanescu Atsushi Ito Raj Jain Toru Kabe Masahiko Kaneko Piotr Karocki Stuart Kerry Adrian Kliks Bruce Kraemer Thomas Kurihara Paul Lambert Kyu Ha Lee Jan-Ray Liao Arthur Light Kanchei Loa Daniel Lubar Greg Luri Michael Lynch Ahmad Mahinfallah Edward McCall Steven Methley Peter Murray Michae
24、l S. Newman Charles Ngethe John Notor Clinton Powell Venkatesha Prasad Leonard Pucker Maximilian Riegel Jeff Rockower Benjamin Rolfe William Rose Randall Safier M. K. Sajeev John Santhoff Naotaka Sato Peter Saunderson Bartien Sayogo Gil Shultz Luis Andre Silva Kapil Sood Thomas Starai Walter Struppl
25、er Fei Tong Ha Nguyen Tran Prabodh Varshney Srinivasa Vemuru John Vergis Stephen Webb Andreas Wolf M. Karen Woolf Forrest Wright Oren Yuen Daidi Zhong Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. vii When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved this standard on 5 December 2012, it had the following member
26、ship: Richard H. Hulett, Chair John Kulick, Vice Chair Robert M. Grow, Past Chair Konstantinos Karachalios, Secretary Satish Aggarwal Masayuki Ariyoshi Peter Balma William Bartley Ted Burse Clint Chaplin Wael Diab Jean-Philippe Faure Alexander Gelman Paul Houz Jim Hughes Young Kyun Kim Joseph L. Koe
27、pfinger* John Kulick David J. Law Thomas Lee Hung Ling Oleg Logvinov Ted Olsen Gary Robinson Jon Walter Rosdahl Mike Seavey Yatin Trivedi Phil Winston Yu Yuan *Member Emeritus Also included are the following nonvoting IEEE-SA Standards Board liaisons: Richard DeBlasio, DOE Representative Michael Jan
28、ezic, NIST Representative Julie Alessi IEEE Standards Program Manager, Document Development Lisa Perry IEEE Standards Program Manager, Technical Program Development Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. viii Introduction This introduction is not part of IEEE Std 1900.1a-2012, IEEE Standard for D
29、efinitions and Concepts for Dynamic Spectrum Access: Terminology Relating to Emerging Wireless Networks, System Functionality, and Spectrum Management Amendment 1: Addition of New Terms and Associated Definitions. This amendment adds additional terms and definitions to the IEEE Std 1900.1-2008 stand
30、ard, which have emerged since its publication in 2008. Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. ix Contents 3. Definitions of radio system functional capabilities2 3.2a Cognitive radio system2 3.6a Policy conformance reasoned2 3.6b Policy enforcer.2 3.9a System strategy reasoning capability.3 3A De
31、finitions of decision making and control concepts that support advanced radio system technologies.3 3A.1 Coexistence policy3 3A.2 Cognitive engine.3 3A.3 DSA policy language4 3A.4 Formal policy4 3A.5 Meta-policy.4 3A.6 Model-theoretic computational semantics4 3A.7 Policy language.4 3A.8 Reasoner4 4.
32、 Definitions of network technologies that support advanced radio system technologies4 4.1 Cognitive radio network4 5. Spectrum management definitions.5 5.10a Data archive.5 5.11a Distributed sensing.5 5.30a Policy authority5 5.35a Radio environment map.5 5.37a RF environment map5 5.37b Sensing contr
33、ol information6 5.37c Sensing information.6 5.37d Sensor6 5.51 Spectrum sensing.6 5.57a White space7 5.57b White space database.7 5.57c White space frequency band7 5.57d White space spectrum band.8 6. Glossary of ancillary terminology8 6.1a Digital policy.8 6.1b Domain8 6.6 Ontology8 6.7 Policy.8 An
34、nex D (informative) Bibliography.9 Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. 1 IEEE Standard for Definitions and Concepts for Dynamic Spectrum Access: Terminology Relating to Emerging Wireless Networks, System Functionality, and Spectrum Management Amendment 1: Addition of New Terms and Associated D
35、efinitions IMPORTANT NOTICE: IEEE Standards documents are not intended to ensure safety, health, or environmental protection, or ensure against interference with or from other devices or networks. Implementers of IEEE Standards documents are responsible for determining and complying with all appropr
36、iate safety, security, environmental, health, and interference protection practices and all applicable laws and regulations. This IEEE document is made available for use subject to important notices and legal disclaimers. These notices and disclaimers appear in all publications containing this docum
37、ent and may be found under the heading “Important Notice” or “Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Documents.” They can also be obtained on request from IEEE or viewed at http:/standards.ieee.org/IPR/disclaimers.html. NOTEThe editing instructions contained in this corrigendum define how
38、 to merge the material contained therein into the existing base standard and its amendments to form the comprehensive standard. The editing instructions are shown in bold italic. Four editing instructions are used: change, delete, insert, and replace. Change is used to make corrections in existing t
39、ext or tables. The editing instruction specifies the location of the change and describes what is being changed by using strikethrough (to remove old material) and underscore (to add new material). Delete removes existing material. Insert adds new material without disturbing the existing material. I
40、nsertions may require renumbering. If so, renumbering instructions are given in the editing instruction. Replace is used to make changes in figures or equations by removing the existing figure or equation and replacing it with a new one. Editing instructions, change markings, and this NOTE will not
41、be carried over into future editions because the changes will be incorporated into the base standard. IEEE Std 1900.1a-2012 IEEE Standard for Definitions and Concepts for Dynamic Spectrum Access: Terminology Relating to Emerging Wireless Networks, System Functionality, and Spectrum Management Amendm
42、ent 1: Addition of New Terms and Associated Definitions Copyright 2013 IEEE. All rights reserved. 2 3. Definitions of radio system functional capabilities Insert the following subclause 3.2a Cognitive radio system A radio system employing technology that allows the system to obtain knowledge of its
43、operational and geographical environment, established policies and its internal state; to dynamically and autonomously adjust its operational parameters and protocols according to its obtained knowledge in order to achieve predefined objectives; and to learn from the results obtained (adopted from I
44、TU-R SM.2152 B29). See also: intelligent radio, cognitive radio network. NOTEIn some contexts, a cognitive radio system is seen as a collection of communicating entities each implementing cognitive radio technologies. Insert the following subclause 3.6a Policy conformance reasoner The system compone
45、nt of a policy-based radio system that evaluates the policy compliance of transmission requests (adopted from IEEE Std 1900.5-2011 B30). See also: policy-based radio. NOTEThe policy conformance reasoner is capable of making logical inferences from a set of asserted facts and rules (i.e., policies).
46、It is able to formally prove or disprove a hypothesis (e.g., that a transmission request is policy compliant), and is capable of inferring additional knowledge (e.g., identifying transmission opportunities for unbound transmission requests). Insert the following subclause 3.6b Policy enforcer The realization of the policy enforcement point in a policy-based radio s