English

Spectrum Sharing between Wireless Networks

Information Theory 2008-09-18 v1 math.IT

Abstract

We consider the problem of two wireless networks operating on the same (presumably unlicensed) frequency band. Pairs within a given network cooperate to schedule transmissions, but between networks there is competition for spectrum. To make the problem tractable, we assume transmissions are scheduled according to a random access protocol where each network chooses an access probability for its users. A game between the two networks is defined. We characterize the Nash Equilibrium behavior of the system. Three regimes are identified; one in which both networks simultaneously schedule all transmissions; one in which the denser network schedules all transmissions and the sparser only schedules a fraction; and one in which both networks schedule only a fraction of their transmissions. The regime of operation depends on the pathloss exponent α\alpha, the latter regime being desirable, but attainable only for α>4\alpha>4. This suggests that in certain environments, rival wireless networks may end up naturally cooperating. To substantiate our analytical results, we simulate a system where networks iteratively optimize their access probabilities in a greedy manner. We also discuss a distributed scheduling protocol that employs carrier sensing, and demonstrate via simulations, that again a near cooperative equilibrium exists for sufficiently large α\alpha.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.2840,
  title  = {Spectrum Sharing between Wireless Networks},
  author = {Leonard Grokop and David N. C. Tse},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.2840},
  year   = {2008}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:20:57.312Z