Abstract

In cognitive radio networks, primary users (PUs) can leverage secondary users (SUs) as cooperative relays to increase their transmission rates, and SUs will in turn obtain more spectrum access opportunities. While most existing works assume that SUs are passively selected by PUs regardless of SUs' willingness, in this paper, we propose a cooperative strategy for SUs to actively decide whether to cooperate or not. Basically, due to PUs' time-varying traffic demands, it is essential for SUs to firstly observe the channels and then select a specific PU to cooperate with in order to save the energy. In our paper, this decision related problem is formulated based on optimal stopping theory where SUs observe PUs in time sequence and then make decisions whether to stop observation and cooperate right away or wait till next time slot to repeat the same process. We address this problem by using backward induction and derive the energy-efficient strategy for SUs. To validate the feasibility of our proposed scheme, extensive simulations are conducted to show the impact of PUs' traffic demands on SUs' decisions. The results also reveal that the proposed optimal rule outperforms the greedy selection strategy and is thus more energy- efficient to be applied to the cooperative cognitive radio networks.

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