Aktas, D.Tokel, T. B.2016-02-082016-02-0820101687-1472http://hdl.handle.net/11693/22173This paper considers base station cooperation as an interference management technique for the downlink of a WiMAX network (IEEE 802.16 standard) with frequency reuse factor of 1. A low-complexity cooperative transmission and scheduling scheme is proposed that requires limited feedback from the users and limited information exchange between the base stations. The proposed scheme requires minor modifications to the legacy IEEE 802.16e systems. The performance of the proposed scheme is compared with noncooperative schemes with similar complexity through computer simulations. Results demonstrate that base station cooperation provides an attractive solution for mitigating the cochannel interference and increases the system spectral efficiency compared to traditional cellular architectures based on frequency reuse.EnglishAttractive solutionsBase station cooperationCellular architectureCooperative transmissionFrequency re-useFrequency reuse factorIEEE 802.16 standardsIEEE 802.16eInterference managementLimited feedbackLimited informationLow-complexityScheduling schemesSystem spectral efficiencyWiMAX networksWiMAX systemsCochannel interferenceComputer simulationLegacy systemsSchedulingSpectrum analyzersWimaxBase stationsA low-complexity transmission and scheduling scheme for wimax systems with base station cooperationArticle10.1155/2010/527591