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IEEE 802.15.22.3-2020

IEEE Standard for Spectrum Characterization and Occupancy Sensing
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IEEE 802.15.22.3-2020

IEEE Standard for Spectrum Characterization and Occupancy Sensing

PUBLISH DATE 2020
PAGES 58
IEEE 802.15.22.3-2020
New IEEE Standard - Active. The architecture, abstraction layers, interfaces, and metadata requirements for spectrum characterization and occupancy sensing (SCOS) systems are specified in this standard. This standard also defines performance parameters, units, and measures. This SCOS system comprises one or more semi-autonomous spectrum sensors, which scan electromagnetic spectrum, digitize it, and perform processing, transmitting the resultant data with appropriate metadata to a central storage and processing system. (The PDF of this standard is available at no charge compliments of the IEEE GET program https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/browse/standards/get-program/page/series?id=68)
This standard defines a spectrum characterization and occupancy sensing (SCOS) system. It defines the formats for system configuration and spectrum measurement parameters. It includes protocols for reporting measurement information that allow the coalescing of results from multiple systems. The standard leverages interfaces and primitives that are derived from IEEE Std 802.22-2011. It uses any available transport mechanism to control and manage the system, and to share sensing data. The standard provides means for conveying value-added sensing information to various spectrum database services.
The purpose of the SCOS system is to characterize and assess the occupancy of spectrum resource towards supporting its more efficient and effective use. The intent of the SCOS system is to create a high-level architecture to support different spectrum sensing technologies and deployments, to enable specialization and provide incentive, to promote broad adoption of sensing technologies and subsequent economies of scale, and to ultimately achieve broader availability and usage of sensing information from different sources. This will enable clients to acquire and use spectrum sensing information from a multiplicity of predefined independent systems to serve their goals. Various national regulators and government authorities are developing regulatory and policy frameworks to allow cooperative spectrum sharing approaches in order to optimize spectrum utilization. There is emphasis on greater spectrum efficiencies, spectrum sharing and spectrum utilization, which require systems that can provide spectrum occupancy at a particular location and at a particular time. More broadly, the spectrum characterization and occupancy sensing (SCOS) system has many applications, which include the following: a) Policy and planning b) Radio planning, management, and engineering c) Regulatory enforcement where systems can detect (RF incursion), locate (source), classify (by type and severity), resolve/remediate d) Research and technology development
SDO IEEE: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Document Number 802.15.22.3
Publication Date Nov. 6, 2020
Language en - English
Page Count
Revision Level
Supercedes
Committee LAN/MAN Standards Committee
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