Abstract

A radio environment map (REM) is an effective spectrum management tool. With the increase in the number of mobile devices, the wireless environment changes more and more frequently, bringing new challenges to REM updates. Traditional update methods usually rely on the amount of data collected for updating without paying attention to whether the wireless environment has changed enough. In particular, a waste of computational resources results from the frequently updated REM when the wireless environment does not change much. When the wireless environment changes a lot, the REM is not updated promptly, resulting in a decrease in REM accuracy. To overcome the above problems, this work combines the Siamese neural network and an attention mechanism in computer vision and proposes an update mechanism based on the amount of wireless environmental change starting from image data. The method compares the newly collected crowdsourced data with the constructed REM in terms of similarity. It uses similarity to measure the necessity of the REM to be updated. The algorithm in this paper can achieve a controlled update by setting a similarity threshold with good controllability. In addition, the effectiveness of the algorithm in detecting changes of the wireless environment has been demonstrated by combing simulation data.

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