Workshop PFT

Research Article

A Dual-Band MAC Protocol for Indoor Cognitive Radio Networks: An e-Health Case Study

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.bodynets.2013.253619,
        author={Raul Chavez-Santiago and Dainius Jankunas and Vladislav Fomin and Ilangko Balasingham},
        title={A Dual-Band MAC Protocol for Indoor Cognitive Radio Networks: An e-Health Case Study},
        proceedings={Workshop PFT},
        publisher={ICST},
        proceedings_a={PFT},
        year={2013},
        month={10},
        keywords={cognitive radio indoor propagation mac layer outage probability},
        doi={10.4108/icst.bodynets.2013.253619}
    }
    
  • Raul Chavez-Santiago
    Dainius Jankunas
    Vladislav Fomin
    Ilangko Balasingham
    Year: 2013
    A Dual-Band MAC Protocol for Indoor Cognitive Radio Networks: An e-Health Case Study
    PFT
    ICST
    DOI: 10.4108/icst.bodynets.2013.253619
Raul Chavez-Santiago,*, Dainius Jankunas1, Vladislav Fomin1, Ilangko Balasingham2
  • 1: Vytautas Magnus University
  • 2: The Intervention Centre, Oslo University Hospital
*Contact email: raul.chavez-santiago@rr-research.no

Abstract

The importance of wireless technology in modern medicine has increased in the last years. It is anticipated that a large number of wireless communication devices for e-health will operate in unlicensed frequency bands in indoor environments. This represents a coexistence problem, which will be particularly challenging in confined areas of hospitals. Electromagnetic interference (EMI) from wireless devices can disrupt the performance of non-communication electronic medical equipment. Cognitive radio is a technology that can ease the coexistence by protecting non-communication electronic medical equipment. In this work we improved a cognitive radio EMI-aware protocol for e-health applications. The original protocol protects medical equipment from harmful interference by preventing wireless transmissions when interference immunity levels are exceeded. However, this leads to high outage probability in areas where protected medical apparatuses are located. In order to maintain a low outage probability under this scheme, we propose the use of an additional channel in a different frequency band for control/data transmission from potential interference sources. We considered the recently allocated 23602400 MHz for medical body area networks and the 902928 MHz band for allocation of the additional control/data channel. Simulation results demonstrated that the use of the proposed dual-band EMI-aware protocol using the 902928 MHz band significantly reduces the outage probability.