Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks

Emerging Medical Body Area Networks (MBANs) require new, protected spectrum for clinical applications. This may mean uncoordinated and autonomous operation of multiple MBANs, within the new candidate bands. The question is that how will MBANs coexist as a secondary service with other radio systems?...

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Main Author: Saied Abedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Croatian Communications and Information Society (CCIS) 2008-09-01
Series:Journal of Communications Software and Systems
Online Access:https://jcomss.fesb.unist.hr/index.php/jcomss/article/view/220
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spelling doaj-ec5d7c6e3d084470adb9240548558e692020-11-25T01:26:13ZengCroatian Communications and Information Society (CCIS)Journal of Communications Software and Systems1845-64211846-60792008-09-0143202221Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor NetworksSaied AbediEmerging Medical Body Area Networks (MBANs) require new, protected spectrum for clinical applications. This may mean uncoordinated and autonomous operation of multiple MBANs, within the new candidate bands. The question is that how will MBANs coexist as a secondary service with other radio systems? Clinical environment requires balance of robust and efficient wireless techniques to enable coexistence of MBANs and other radio devices where low transmission power MBANs as secondary systems may be vulnerable to interference from incumbent devices transceivers. Physical separation between the MBANs and incumbent radio devices and avoiding the transmission in the same frequency bands among the wireless techniques may be considered. In this paper, we propose interferencemanagement techniques considering such coexistencebetween the MBANs and other radio systems and deal withthe issue of co-existence with primary systems by proposing novel methods for a gateway-to-gateway coordination, to assist the methods described in the first and second part of this paper. Result is improved reliability and Quality of Service for MBANs. These would lead to multiple clinical benefits, including better patient mobility, more monitoring flexibility and extension of monitoring into care areas that are currently unmonitored. Reduced clinical errors and reduced overall monitoring costs are other results. https://jcomss.fesb.unist.hr/index.php/jcomss/article/view/220
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saied Abedi
spellingShingle Saied Abedi
Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
Journal of Communications Software and Systems
author_facet Saied Abedi
author_sort Saied Abedi
title Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
title_short Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
title_full Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
title_fullStr Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
title_full_unstemmed Methods for Interference Management in Medical Wireless Sensor Networks
title_sort methods for interference management in medical wireless sensor networks
publisher Croatian Communications and Information Society (CCIS)
series Journal of Communications Software and Systems
issn 1845-6421
1846-6079
publishDate 2008-09-01
description Emerging Medical Body Area Networks (MBANs) require new, protected spectrum for clinical applications. This may mean uncoordinated and autonomous operation of multiple MBANs, within the new candidate bands. The question is that how will MBANs coexist as a secondary service with other radio systems? Clinical environment requires balance of robust and efficient wireless techniques to enable coexistence of MBANs and other radio devices where low transmission power MBANs as secondary systems may be vulnerable to interference from incumbent devices transceivers. Physical separation between the MBANs and incumbent radio devices and avoiding the transmission in the same frequency bands among the wireless techniques may be considered. In this paper, we propose interferencemanagement techniques considering such coexistencebetween the MBANs and other radio systems and deal withthe issue of co-existence with primary systems by proposing novel methods for a gateway-to-gateway coordination, to assist the methods described in the first and second part of this paper. Result is improved reliability and Quality of Service for MBANs. These would lead to multiple clinical benefits, including better patient mobility, more monitoring flexibility and extension of monitoring into care areas that are currently unmonitored. Reduced clinical errors and reduced overall monitoring costs are other results.
url https://jcomss.fesb.unist.hr/index.php/jcomss/article/view/220
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