Abstract

Cognitive radio (CR) is an emergent technology that is considered for more efficient spectrum utilization. Spectrum Sensing (SS), i.e. detection of primary user (PU) in the frequency band, is one of the key tasks of cognitive radio systems. Recently, various works on the support vector machine (SVM)-assisted covariance-based spectrum sensing (CSS) in multi-receiver systems were presented and evaluated with computer simulations. However, the real environment is different, especially since the noise is often assumed to be spatially uncorrelated, while it is correlated in reality. Therefore, we propose a four-receivers software-defined radio (SDR)-based test platform for experimental evaluation of SVM-assisted CSS techniques. Furthermore, we implement an SVM-assisted CSS technique in the proposed platform to assess its performance when two and four receivers are activated. The measurements showed that increasing the number of receiving channels does indeed enhances the detection probability. Moreover, we evaluated the algorithm in both white and correlated noise scenarios. The evaluation demonstrates how the presence of correlated noise deteriorated the performance of the SVM-assisted CSS compared with the case where only white noise is present. More specifically, the simulations showed that to reach 99% detection probability when noise correlation is present, the implemented algorithm requires an SNR value that is <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"><tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\text{10}~dB$</tex-math></inline-formula> greater than the one required when white noise only is present.

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