WO2007081174A1 - Handoff method and apparatus for terminal based on efficient set management in communication system - Google Patents

Handoff method and apparatus for terminal based on efficient set management in communication system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2007081174A1
WO2007081174A1 PCT/KR2007/000220 KR2007000220W WO2007081174A1 WO 2007081174 A1 WO2007081174 A1 WO 2007081174A1 KR 2007000220 W KR2007000220 W KR 2007000220W WO 2007081174 A1 WO2007081174 A1 WO 2007081174A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
terminal
handoff
base station
pilot
active set
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/KR2007/000220
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Min-Suk Ko
Hye-Jeong Kim
Seong-Woo Ahn
Original Assignee
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from KR1020070003199A external-priority patent/KR101344743B1/en
Application filed by Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. filed Critical Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Priority to US12/159,711 priority Critical patent/US8594042B2/en
Publication of WO2007081174A1 publication Critical patent/WO2007081174A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/24Reselection being triggered by specific parameters
    • H04W36/249Reselection being triggered by specific parameters according to timing information
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/08Reselecting an access point
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/34Reselection control
    • H04W36/36Reselection control by user or terminal equipment

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a handoff method and apparatus for a terminal based on efficient set management.
  • a terminal performs sleep processing for interrupting the operation of the entire hardware, except for a portion of hardware during time other than its assigned paging slot, in order to reduce the power consumption of its battery.
  • the terminal In an idle state where a call connection is not made, i.e., traffic is not set up, the terminal repeats waking up only during its assigned paging slot to search the paging slot and sleeping during time other than the paging slot.
  • the terminal does not operate in a sleep mode when receiving an overhead message, having a transmission message destined to a base station, or performing such an operation as an idle handoff.
  • the terminal in the idle state also performs search rate control for controlling the time taken to search a single set and search scheduling for efficiently searching a single set within a given time frame.
  • search rate control for controlling the time taken to search a single set and search scheduling for efficiently searching a single set within a given time frame.
  • FIG. 1 is a view for explaining a conventional process in which the terminal in the idle state performs pilot energy measurement during a pilot slot.
  • the terminal performs a search scheduling process of searching for a pilot in a Base Station (BS) of an active set and a pilot in a BS of a neighbor set, by turns during every period, in which a BS of the active set will be referred to as A, and a BS of the neighbor set will be referred to as N.
  • BS Base Station
  • the terminal carries out searches in the order of A, Ni, A, N 2 , ..., A, N M , A, N b A, N 2 , ..., A, N M ...
  • the terminal after measuring the pilot of A of the active set and then the pilot OfN 1 of the neighbor set, the terminal measures the pilot of A and then the pilot ofN 2 . In this way, the terminal continues pilot measurement up to N M of the neighbor set.
  • the terminal in the idle state performs the pilot measurement during the paging slot.
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a conventional process in which the terminal in the idle state searches for the pilot of a BS of each set to determine whether to perform an idle handoff, and performs the idle handoff according to the determination result.
  • step 210 the terminal searches for pilots as in FIG. 1.
  • the terminal measures the pilot of A of the active set and the pilot of N of the neighbor set by turns one-by-one.
  • step 220 it is checked if there is N in the neighbor set, which has pilot energy greater by at least -3dB than that of A in the active set each time searches for one pilot of the active set and one pilot of the neighbor set are finished. If such N does not exist in the neighbor set, the process returns to step 210 for pilot searching. If such N exists in the neighbor set which has pilot energy greater by at least -3dB than that of A in the active set, the terminal performs an idle handoff by setting the neighbor set as an active set and adding the previous active set to a neighbor set.
  • a change falling outside a threshold range of an idle handoff between adjacent BSs may occur frequently.
  • the terminal may frequently repeat an idle handoff between the adjacent BSs, failing to enter a power saving mode, and thus increasing power consumption.
  • a handoff is conventionally permitted only after predetermined time T 1 has elapsed from the last idle handoff. In other words, it is checked if a difference between the last handoff time and the current time is greater than the predetermined time T 1 in step 230. If so, the terminal performs an idle handoff by setting the neighbor set as an active set in step 240. If the difference is not greater than the predetermined time T 1 in step 230, the terminal goes back to step 210 to search for A of the active set and N of the neighbor set by turns.
  • the terminal searches for a BS of the active set and a BS of the neighbor set by turns while in the idle state.
  • the terminal may search the active set at an even higher rate than required in a Code Division Multiplexing Access (CDMA) system, and the number of BSs of the neighbor set, which the terminal can search for, may be accordingly reduced.
  • CDMA Code Division Multiplexing Access
  • the terminal fails to recognize a need for an idle handoff when the idle handoff is required, it would spend much time in reacquiring a slot during a next paging slot, increasing a system loss probability.
  • the conventional method in which an idle handoff is permitted only after the predetermined time T 1 has elapsed from the last handoff using a timer for the pu ⁇ ose of preventing unnecessarily frequent handoffs at the cell boundary, imposes a restriction on every idle handoff, and thus may also interrupt a necessary idle handoff.
  • a BS assigns a paging slot to each terminal and the terminal receives a paging channel message during its assigned paging slot.
  • the paging channel message includes a paging message requesting the terminal to perform a call connection.
  • a handoff is requested regardless of whether the current slot is the paging slot assigned to the terminal.
  • the terminal performs an idle handoff during its assigned paging slot, it would be likely to fail to receive the paging message.
  • the terminal may fail to receive the paging message during registration in a BS after the idle handoff.
  • An aspect of the present invention is to address at least the above problems and/or disadvantages and to provide at least the advantages described below. Accordingly, an aspect of the present invention is to provide a handoff method and apparatus for a terminal based on efficient set management.
  • Another aspect of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus in which a terminal determines whether to perform a handoff through pilot energy measurement using different pilot measurement patterns according to its connection states.
  • Another aspect of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus in which a terminal manages a pilot set for a handoff while in an idle state.
  • Another aspect of the present invention is to provide an efficient handoff method and apparatus in which a terminal increases a pilot search rate of a BS of a neighbor set in order to prevent a failure to perform a necessary idle handoff or a failure to receive a paging message for a call connection.
  • a handoff method for a terminal in an idle state in a mobile communication system is provided.
  • the handoff method includes searching for a pilot of a single base station of an active set and pilots of at least one base station of a neighbor set, checking if among the base stations of the neighbor set, there is a base station having pilot energy that is greater than that of the active set, and if there is such a base station in the neighbor set, checking if a pseudo noise offset of the base station of the neighbor set, to which idle handoff is made, is equal to that of a base station included in an active set list containing previous base stations that have been active sets, and if those pseudo noise offsets are equal to each other, calculating a difference between the last time at which a previous base station functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time, and if the difference is greater than threshold time, checking if a pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold and performing a handoff to the base station of the neighbor set.
  • a handoff method for a terminal based on efficient set management includes the terminal checking if a channel assignment message is received from a base station to check its connection state, and measuring a pilot energy of a single base station of an active set and pilot energies of at least one base station of a neighbor set using different pilot measurement patterns according to the connection state.
  • a terminal that performs a handoff based on efficient set management.
  • the terminal includes a pilot energy extractor for measuring the energy of a received pilot channel, a storing unit for storing the measured pilot energy for an active set and a neighbor set seperately, a comparator for reading pilot energies of the active set and the neighbor set from the storing unit and comparing the read pilot energies using different pilot measurement patterns according to a connection state of the terminal, and a handoff unit for determining whether to perform a handoff according to the comparison result.
  • FIG. 1 is a view for explaining a conventional process in which a terminal in an idle state performs pilot energy measurement
  • FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a conventional process in which a terminal in an idle state searches for pilots and performs a handoff;
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal sends a connection request to a BS in order to transmit? to a traffic state according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a BS sends a connection request to a terminal in order to cause the terminal to transmit? to a traffic state according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a process of applying different pilot measurement patterns based on the states of a terminal according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 6 is a view for explaining a process in which an idle-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 7 is a view for explaining a process in which a traffic-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal according to the present invention performs an idle handoff.
  • FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a terminal according to the present invention.
  • An exemplary embodiment of the present invention proposes a method for reducing an active set search rate in a paging slot search period to which search rate control is not applied.
  • a pilot set means a set of Base Stations (BSs) that satisfy a predetermined condition.
  • the pilot set can be classified into an active set, a candidate set, a neighbor set, and a remaining set.
  • the terminal is either receiving a sync channel or a paging channel from, or has a call connection with the active set of BSs.
  • the candidate set is a set of
  • the neighbor set is a set of BSs surrounding the active set and having some probability of becoming a new active set through a handoff during movement of the terminal.
  • the remaining set is a set of BSs that fail to satisfy the conditions of the other three sets.
  • the terminal While in an idle state, the terminal manages a single active set and BSs of a neighbor set, which are informed, through a neighbor list message transmitted from a BS that is the active set.
  • the terminal In order to receive a paging channel from a BS having the best reception performance, the terminal continuously searches for pilots of the BS of the active set and the BSs of the neighbor set.
  • the terminal performs an idle handoff by changing the BS of the neighbor set into an active set.
  • the present invention suggests a method in which a terminal checks if it is in an idle state or in a traffic state, and measures the pilot energy of the BS of the active set and the pilot energy of a BS of the neighbor set with different pilot measurement patterns according to the checked state.
  • the present invention also suggests a method in which the terminal measures the pilot of the single BS of the active set and the pilots of at least one BS of the neighbor set while in the idle state.
  • the present invention also suggests a method in which the terminal in the idle state operates in a sleep mode upon reception of information indicating that there is no paging channel, thereby minimizing its power consumption.
  • FIGs. 3 and 4 show conditions that the terminal has to meet for entering the traffic state.
  • FIG. 3 shows the traffic state entry conditions when the terminal sends a connection request to a BS.
  • step 310 the terminal sends an Order Message (ORM) requesting a connection to a BS in order to perform a communication with the BS by connecting to radio resources.
  • ORM Order Message
  • step 320 the terminal checks if a Channel Assignment Message (CAM) is received in response to the ORM. If so, the terminal proceeds to step 330.
  • CAM Channel Assignment Message
  • step 330 the terminal is in connection to the radio resources through a channel assigned by the BS, i.e., the terminal enters the traffic state.
  • step 320 If the terminal fails to receive the CAM from the BS in step 320, the terminal proceeds to step 340. In step 340, the terminal stays in the idle state.
  • FIG. 4 shows the traffic state entry conditions when the BS sends a connection request to the terminal.
  • the terminal receives a message requesting a connection to radio resources from the BS. For example, the terminal receives a paging message indicating that there is transmission data destined to the terminal from the BS.
  • the terminal sends a paging response message indicative of the normal reception of the paging message to the BS.
  • step 430 the terminal checks if the CAM is received from the BS. If so, the terminal proceeds to step 450.
  • the terminal transmits? to the traffic state by connecting to the radio resources through a channel assigned by the BS. If the terminal fails to receive the CAM from the BS in step 430, it goes to step 460. In step 460, the terminal stays in the idle state.
  • the terminal in the idle state periodically performs sleep processing.
  • the terminal in the idle state can perform pilot energy measurement only while waking up.
  • Such a wake-up period is much shorter than the time during which the terminal in the traffic state performs pilot energy measurement.
  • the present invention proposes a method for increasing the neighbor set search rate while reducing the active set search rate.
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a process of applying different pilot measurement patterns based on the state of the terminal according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
  • the terminal desires pilot energy measurement in step 510.
  • the terminal checks if its state, determined as in FIG. 3 or 4, is the idle state.
  • step 540 If the terminal is in the idle state, it goes to step 540 to continue using a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the idle state.
  • step 530 If the terminal is in the traffic state, it goes to step 530 to use a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the traffic state. The terminal then returns to step 510 to perform pilot energy measurement using the corresponding pilot measurement pattern.
  • FIG. 6 is a view for explaining a process in which an idle-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
  • the terminal searches for a single BS of an active set and at least one ⁇ m) BSs of a neighbor set in the order of A, N 1 , A, N 2 , ..., A, N m , A, N 1 , A, N 2 , ..., A, N m ... during a search rate control non-applied period, thereby performing search scheduling.
  • the terminal collectively processes the search results with respect to the single BS of the active set and the m BSs of the neighbor set.
  • the 'm BSs' means the number of a BS of a neighbor set. By doing so, it is possible to reduce the active set search rate and increase the neighbor set search rate while reducing the time required for processing the search results.
  • m is set to 3.
  • the active set search rate is reduced to half and the neighbor set search rate is increased to 1.5 times.
  • m may be set variable according to a search rate.
  • m may be set greater than 3 in order for the terminal to wake up during a paging slot and search for BSs of the neighbor set with maximum efficiency.
  • the terminal performs pilot energy measurement for A of the active set and N of the neighbor set by turns for the reliability of the active set. In other words, the terminal checks if among the BSs of the neighbor set, there is a BS having pilot energy that is greater by at least 3dB than that of the BS of the active set by measuring a pilot of the active set and a pilot of the neighbor set.
  • FIG. 7 is a view for explaining a process in which a traffic-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
  • the terminal applies search rate control to every period.
  • the terminal performs pilot energy measurement over the entire period of the traffic state with a pattern as illustrated in FIG. 7.
  • the terminal searches its managed active sets, it searches in its managed candidate sets and then in the neighbor sets. For example, the terminal may search one through four neighbor sets.
  • a BS of the active set is referred to as A
  • a BS of the candidate set is referred to as C
  • a BS of the neighbor set is referred to as
  • the traffic-state terminal performs searches in the order of Ai, A 2 , ..., A N , C I , C 2 , ..., C M , Ni, N 2 , ..., Ni, A 1 , ...
  • FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal according to the present invention performs an idle handoff.
  • step 810 the terminal checks if, among the BSs of the neighbor set, there is a BS having pilot energy that is greater by at least 3dB than that of the BS of the active set.
  • step 820 If so, the terminal goes to step 820 for an idle handoff. Otherwise, the terminal returns to step 800 to resume pilot energy measurement.
  • the terminal determines whether to perform a handoff using a list of previous active sets prior to the current active set, i.e., an active set list of BSs, in order to prevent an unnecessary handoff at a cell boundary and perform a necessary handoff.
  • a handoff for the neighbor set is likely to be an unnecessary handoff of the cell boundary.
  • one handoff condition is further checked.
  • the terminal checks the active set list to determine whether the Pseudo Noise (PN) offset of a BS of the neighbor set to which an idle handoff is to be made is equal to the PN offset of a BS included in the active set list.
  • the PN offset is set different for each BS, and the terminal can perform pilot energy measurement for each BS using the PN offset. Since a maximum of three sectors generally overlap for one PN, the number of BSs included in the active set list used for the check may be limited to two.
  • the terminal calculates a difference between the last time at which the BS included in the active set list functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time in step 830.
  • the terminal If the difference is less than predetermined time T 2 that is set to prevent an unnecessary handoff, the terminal returns to step 800 to resume pilot energy measurement without performing a handoff. On the other hand, if the difference is greater than the predetermined time T 2 , the terminal performs a next step for an idle handoff.
  • the terminal checks if the strength of a pilot signal of the active set satisfies a minimum threshold for a handoff before performing an idle handoff.
  • step 840 the terminal measures the pilot energy of the current active set to increase the probability of receiving a paging message in the idle handoff situation.
  • the terminal determines that a normal connection cannot be made due to weak energy, even if the terminal enters the traffic state. Thus, the terminal performs an idle handoff in step 870.
  • the terminal checks if it is in its assigned paging slot in step 850. If the terminal is not in its assigned paging slot, it performs an idle handoff in step 870.
  • the terminal If the terminal is in its assigned paging slot, it checks if there is a General Paging Message (GPM) to be received in step 860. If receiving a GPM message (GPM)
  • the terminal goes to step 870 to perform an idle handoff.
  • the terminal has not yet received the GPM-DONE message, it has to continuously check if there is a paging message to be transmitted during the assigned paging slot. Thus, the terminal performs a handoff after the assigned paging slot has passed.
  • FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a terminal according to the present invention.
  • a pilot signal receiver 910 receives a pilot channel of a set.
  • a pilot energy extractor 920 measures the energy of the received pilot channel of the set.
  • a pilot set energy storing unit 930 stores energies of sets included in a set list managed by the terminal. The newly measured energy of a pilot is stored by modifying the energy of a corresponding set in the set list stored in the pilot set energy storing unit 930. In other words, the pilot set energy storing unit 930 updates the energy of the set with the newly measured energy.
  • a comparator 940 compares the currently measured energy of the set with the energy of the current active set to determine whether a handoff is required.
  • a pilot measurement unit 960 When the terminal is in the traffic state, a pilot measurement unit 960 performs energy measurement in the order of A, Ni, A, N 2 , ..., A, N m , A, Ni, A, N 2 , ..., A, N m ... using a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the traffic state.
  • the comparator 940 determines whether to perform a handoff based on the measurement result obtained using the pilot measurement pattern determined by the pilot measurement unit 960 or 970.
  • the comparator 940 checks the presence of a BS having the greater pilot energy in the neighbor set by measuring the pilot energy of the single BS of the active set and the pilot energies of at least one BS of the neighbor set and checks if the PN offset of the BS of the neighbor set is equal to the PN offset of a BS included in the active set list.
  • the comparator 940 also calculates a difference between the last time at which the BS included in the active set list functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time. If the difference is greater than a threshold, the terminal determines whether the pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold. Next, a handoff unit 950 then performs a handoff to the BS of the neighbor set according to the determination result.
  • the handoff unit 950 performs a handoff to the BS of the neighbor set.
  • the handoff unit 950 performs a handoff.
  • the energy of the candidate set and the energy of the current active set are compared with each other. If it is determined that a handoff is required, a handoff request message is sent to a BS.
  • the handoff unit 950 performs the handoff by connecting to radio resources of a BS to which the handoff is to be made.
  • a handoff is performed if the comparator 940 determines that the handoff is required.
  • the handoff is performed only when a handoff order message is received in response to the handoff request message sent to the BS.
  • the number of searches for BSs of a neighbor set is increased in a search rate control non- applied period, and a handoff is performed only when a plurality of conditions for the handoff are satisfied.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)

Abstract

A handoff method and apparatus for a terminal based on efficient set management is disclosed. A pilot search rate for base stations of a neighbor set is increased, thereby preventing a failure to perform a necessary idle handoff or a failure to receive a paging message for a call connection.

Description

HANDOFF METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR TERMINAL BASED ON EFFICIENT SET MANAGEMENT IN COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a handoff method and apparatus for a terminal based on efficient set management.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a mobile communication system, a terminal performs sleep processing for interrupting the operation of the entire hardware, except for a portion of hardware during time other than its assigned paging slot, in order to reduce the power consumption of its battery.
In an idle state where a call connection is not made, i.e., traffic is not set up, the terminal repeats waking up only during its assigned paging slot to search the paging slot and sleeping during time other than the paging slot. The terminal does not operate in a sleep mode when receiving an overhead message, having a transmission message destined to a base station, or performing such an operation as an idle handoff.
To prevent the excessive power consumption of a Central Processing Unit (CPU) due to many unnecessary searches while guaranteeing a predetermined number of searches within specific time, the terminal in the idle state also performs search rate control for controlling the time taken to search a single set and search scheduling for efficiently searching a single set within a given time frame.
The terminal wakes up for a short time period of 50 - 80ms during the assigned paging slot. For that short time period, the terminal has to search for pilots of as many base stations of a neighbor set as possible to determine whether the terminal is in the idle handoff situation. Consequently, the terminal does not perform search rate control for that time period. FIG. 1 is a view for explaining a conventional process in which the terminal in the idle state performs pilot energy measurement during a pilot slot.
As illustrated in FIG. 1, the terminal performs a search scheduling process of searching for a pilot in a Base Station (BS) of an active set and a pilot in a BS of a neighbor set, by turns during every period, in which a BS of the active set will be referred to as A, and a BS of the neighbor set will be referred to as N.
For example, when the number of pilots of a neighbor set is M, i.e., the number of BSs of the neighbor set is M, the terminal carries out searches in the order of A, Ni, A, N2, ..., A, NM, A, Nb A, N2, ..., A, NM...
In other words, after measuring the pilot of A of the active set and then the pilot OfN1 of the neighbor set, the terminal measures the pilot of A and then the pilot ofN2. In this way, the terminal continues pilot measurement up to NM of the neighbor set.
The terminal in the idle state performs the pilot measurement during the paging slot.
FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a conventional process in which the terminal in the idle state searches for the pilot of a BS of each set to determine whether to perform an idle handoff, and performs the idle handoff according to the determination result.
In step 210, the terminal searches for pilots as in FIG. 1. In other words, the terminal measures the pilot of A of the active set and the pilot of N of the neighbor set by turns one-by-one.
In step 220, it is checked if there is N in the neighbor set, which has pilot energy greater by at least -3dB than that of A in the active set each time searches for one pilot of the active set and one pilot of the neighbor set are finished. If such N does not exist in the neighbor set, the process returns to step 210 for pilot searching. If such N exists in the neighbor set which has pilot energy greater by at least -3dB than that of A in the active set, the terminal performs an idle handoff by setting the neighbor set as an active set and adding the previous active set to a neighbor set.
When the terminal is in the boundary of a cell or a sector, a change falling outside a threshold range of an idle handoff between adjacent BSs may occur frequently. At this time, the terminal may frequently repeat an idle handoff between the adjacent BSs, failing to enter a power saving mode, and thus increasing power consumption.
To solve the problem, a handoff is conventionally permitted only after predetermined time T1 has elapsed from the last idle handoff. In other words, it is checked if a difference between the last handoff time and the current time is greater than the predetermined time T1 in step 230. If so, the terminal performs an idle handoff by setting the neighbor set as an active set in step 240. If the difference is not greater than the predetermined time T1 in step 230, the terminal goes back to step 210 to search for A of the active set and N of the neighbor set by turns.
As mentioned above, the terminal searches for a BS of the active set and a BS of the neighbor set by turns while in the idle state. However, during a paging slot search period, to which search rate control is not applied, when searching the paging slot as in FIG. 2, the terminal may search the active set at an even higher rate than required in a Code Division Multiplexing Access (CDMA) system, and the number of BSs of the neighbor set, which the terminal can search for, may be accordingly reduced. As a result, the- terminal may not sufficiently recognize its surrounding network status within a given time.
If the terminal fails to recognize a need for an idle handoff when the idle handoff is required, it would spend much time in reacquiring a slot during a next paging slot, increasing a system loss probability.
Moreover, the conventional method, in which an idle handoff is permitted only after the predetermined time T1 has elapsed from the last handoff using a timer for the puφose of preventing unnecessarily frequent handoffs at the cell boundary, imposes a restriction on every idle handoff, and thus may also interrupt a necessary idle handoff.
Additionally, a BS assigns a paging slot to each terminal and the terminal receives a paging channel message during its assigned paging slot. The paging channel message includes a paging message requesting the terminal to perform a call connection. However, conventionally, a handoff is requested regardless of whether the current slot is the paging slot assigned to the terminal. As a result, if the terminal performs an idle handoff during its assigned paging slot, it would be likely to fail to receive the paging message. In particular, when performing an idle handoff at a boundary region in which a network ID or a zone ID changes, the terminal may fail to receive the paging message during registration in a BS after the idle handoff.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An aspect of the present invention is to address at least the above problems and/or disadvantages and to provide at least the advantages described below. Accordingly, an aspect of the present invention is to provide a handoff method and apparatus for a terminal based on efficient set management.
Another aspect of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus in which a terminal determines whether to perform a handoff through pilot energy measurement using different pilot measurement patterns according to its connection states.
Another aspect of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus in which a terminal manages a pilot set for a handoff while in an idle state.
Another aspect of the present invention is to provide an efficient handoff method and apparatus in which a terminal increases a pilot search rate of a BS of a neighbor set in order to prevent a failure to perform a necessary idle handoff or a failure to receive a paging message for a call connection. According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a handoff method for a terminal in an idle state in a mobile communication system. The handoff method includes searching for a pilot of a single base station of an active set and pilots of at least one base station of a neighbor set, checking if among the base stations of the neighbor set, there is a base station having pilot energy that is greater than that of the active set, and if there is such a base station in the neighbor set, checking if a pseudo noise offset of the base station of the neighbor set, to which idle handoff is made, is equal to that of a base station included in an active set list containing previous base stations that have been active sets, and if those pseudo noise offsets are equal to each other, calculating a difference between the last time at which a previous base station functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time, and if the difference is greater than threshold time, checking if a pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold and performing a handoff to the base station of the neighbor set.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a handoff method for a terminal based on efficient set management. The handoff method includes the terminal checking if a channel assignment message is received from a base station to check its connection state, and measuring a pilot energy of a single base station of an active set and pilot energies of at least one base station of a neighbor set using different pilot measurement patterns according to the connection state.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a terminal that performs a handoff based on efficient set management. The terminal includes a pilot energy extractor for measuring the energy of a received pilot channel, a storing unit for storing the measured pilot energy for an active set and a neighbor set seperately, a comparator for reading pilot energies of the active set and the neighbor set from the storing unit and comparing the read pilot energies using different pilot measurement patterns according to a connection state of the terminal, and a handoff unit for determining whether to perform a handoff according to the comparison result.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The above and other features and advantages of an exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be more apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which: FIG. 1 is a view for explaining a conventional process in which a terminal in an idle state performs pilot energy measurement;
FIG. 2 is a flowchart illustrating a conventional process in which a terminal in an idle state searches for pilots and performs a handoff;
FIG. 3 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal sends a connection request to a BS in order to transmit? to a traffic state according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a BS sends a connection request to a terminal in order to cause the terminal to transmit? to a traffic state according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a process of applying different pilot measurement patterns based on the states of a terminal according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 6 is a view for explaining a process in which an idle-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 7 is a view for explaining a process in which a traffic-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal according to the present invention performs an idle handoff; and
FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a terminal according to the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENT
The matters defined in the description such as a detailed construction and elements are provided to assist in a comprehensive understanding of an exemplary embodiment of the invention. Accordingly, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that various changes and modifications of the embodiment described herein can be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Also, descriptions of well-known functions and constructions are omitted for clarity and conciseness and like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout the specification.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention proposes a method for reducing an active set search rate in a paging slot search period to which search rate control is not applied.
In a Code Division Multiplexing Access (CDMA) technique, a pilot set means a set of Base Stations (BSs) that satisfy a predetermined condition. The pilot set can be classified into an active set, a candidate set, a neighbor set, and a remaining set.
The terminal is either receiving a sync channel or a paging channel from, or has a call connection with the active set of BSs. The candidate set is a set of
BSs having a high probability of becoming the active set, with which the terminal has no call connection, but from which the terminal receives a sync channel or a paging channel at a similar energy level to the active set.
The neighbor set is a set of BSs surrounding the active set and having some probability of becoming a new active set through a handoff during movement of the terminal. The remaining set is a set of BSs that fail to satisfy the conditions of the other three sets.
While in an idle state, the terminal manages a single active set and BSs of a neighbor set, which are informed, through a neighbor list message transmitted from a BS that is the active set. In order to receive a paging channel from a BS having the best reception performance, the terminal continuously searches for pilots of the BS of the active set and the BSs of the neighbor set. When there is a BS satisfying a handoff condition in the neighbor set, the terminal performs an idle handoff by changing the BS of the neighbor set into an active set.
Therefore, the present invention suggests a method in which a terminal checks if it is in an idle state or in a traffic state, and measures the pilot energy of the BS of the active set and the pilot energy of a BS of the neighbor set with different pilot measurement patterns according to the checked state. The present invention also suggests a method in which the terminal measures the pilot of the single BS of the active set and the pilots of at least one BS of the neighbor set while in the idle state. The present invention also suggests a method in which the terminal in the idle state operates in a sleep mode upon reception of information indicating that there is no paging channel, thereby minimizing its power consumption.
FIGs. 3 and 4 show conditions that the terminal has to meet for entering the traffic state. In particular, FIG. 3 shows the traffic state entry conditions when the terminal sends a connection request to a BS.
Referring to FIG. 3, in step 310, the terminal sends an Order Message (ORM) requesting a connection to a BS in order to perform a communication with the BS by connecting to radio resources.
In step 320, the terminal checks if a Channel Assignment Message (CAM) is received in response to the ORM. If so, the terminal proceeds to step 330.
In step 330, the terminal is in connection to the radio resources through a channel assigned by the BS, i.e., the terminal enters the traffic state.
If the terminal fails to receive the CAM from the BS in step 320, the terminal proceeds to step 340. In step 340, the terminal stays in the idle state.
FIG. 4 shows the traffic state entry conditions when the BS sends a connection request to the terminal.
Referring to FIG. 4, in step 410, the terminal receives a message requesting a connection to radio resources from the BS. For example, the terminal receives a paging message indicating that there is transmission data destined to the terminal from the BS. In step 420, the terminal sends a paging response message indicative of the normal reception of the paging message to the BS.
In step 430, the terminal checks if the CAM is received from the BS. If so, the terminal proceeds to step 450. In step 450, the terminal transmits? to the traffic state by connecting to the radio resources through a channel assigned by the BS. If the terminal fails to receive the CAM from the BS in step 430, it goes to step 460. In step 460, the terminal stays in the idle state.
According to the present invention, the terminal in the idle state periodically performs sleep processing. Thus, the terminal in the idle state can perform pilot energy measurement only while waking up. Such a wake-up period is much shorter than the time during which the terminal in the traffic state performs pilot energy measurement.
Moreover, while in the idle state, the terminal experiences a difficulty in recognizing the energy state of a neighbor set surrounding the terminal due to sleep processing. Therefore, the present invention proposes a method for increasing the neighbor set search rate while reducing the active set search rate.
FIG. 5 is a flowchart illustrating a process of applying different pilot measurement patterns based on the state of the terminal according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
Referring to FIG. 5, the terminal desires pilot energy measurement in step 510. In step 520, the terminal checks if its state, determined as in FIG. 3 or 4, is the idle state.
If the terminal is in the idle state, it goes to step 540 to continue using a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the idle state.
If the terminal is in the traffic state, it goes to step 530 to use a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the traffic state. The terminal then returns to step 510 to perform pilot energy measurement using the corresponding pilot measurement pattern.
FIG. 6 is a view for explaining a process in which an idle-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
As illustrated in FIG. 6, in an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the terminal searches for a single BS of an active set and at least one^m) BSs of a neighbor set in the order of A, N1, A, N2, ..., A, Nm, A, N1, A, N2, ..., A, Nm... during a search rate control non-applied period, thereby performing search scheduling. The terminal collectively processes the search results with respect to the single BS of the active set and the m BSs of the neighbor set. Here, the 'm BSs' means the number of a BS of a neighbor set. By doing so, it is possible to reduce the active set search rate and increase the neighbor set search rate while reducing the time required for processing the search results.
For example, in an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, m is set to 3. In this case, the active set search rate is reduced to half and the neighbor set search rate is increased to 1.5 times. According to the present invention, m may be set variable according to a search rate. In other words, m may be set greater than 3 in order for the terminal to wake up during a paging slot and search for BSs of the neighbor set with maximum efficiency. By performing pilot measurement for the BSs of the neighbor set a higher number of times than for the single BS of the active set, the terminal can efficiently perform an idle handoff.
During a search rate applied period, the terminal performs pilot energy measurement for A of the active set and N of the neighbor set by turns for the reliability of the active set. In other words, the terminal checks if among the BSs of the neighbor set, there is a BS having pilot energy that is greater by at least 3dB than that of the BS of the active set by measuring a pilot of the active set and a pilot of the neighbor set. FIG. 7 is a view for explaining a process in which a traffic-state terminal performs pilot energy measurement according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
Referring to FIG. 7, in the traffic state, the terminal applies search rate control to every period. Thus, the terminal performs pilot energy measurement over the entire period of the traffic state with a pattern as illustrated in FIG. 7. In other words, after the terminal searches its managed active sets, it searches in its managed candidate sets and then in the neighbor sets. For example, the terminal may search one through four neighbor sets.
Thus, as in FIG. 7, when a BS of the active set is referred to as A, a BS of the candidate set is referred to as C, a BS of the neighbor set is referred to as
N, the number of BS of the active set is N, the number of BS of candidate set is M, and the number of BS of neighbor set is I, the traffic-state terminal performs searches in the order of Ai, A2, ..., AN, CI, C2, ..., CM, Ni, N2, ..., Ni, A1, ...
FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a process in which a terminal according to the present invention performs an idle handoff.
Referring to FIG. 8, in step 800, the terminal performs pilot energy measurement for a single BS of an active set and at least one (=m) BS of a neighbor set as in FIG. 6.
In step 810, the terminal checks if, among the BSs of the neighbor set, there is a BS having pilot energy that is greater by at least 3dB than that of the BS of the active set.
If so, the terminal goes to step 820 for an idle handoff. Otherwise, the terminal returns to step 800 to resume pilot energy measurement.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, before performing an idle handoff, the terminal determines whether to perform a handoff using a list of previous active sets prior to the current active set, i.e., an active set list of BSs, in order to prevent an unnecessary handoff at a cell boundary and perform a necessary handoff. In other words, when the pilot energy of an active set immediately previous to the current active set is greater by at least 3dB than that of the current active set, a handoff for the neighbor set is likely to be an unnecessary handoff of the cell boundary. In order to prevent the unnecessary handoff, one handoff condition is further checked.
More specifically, in step 820, the terminal checks the active set list to determine whether the Pseudo Noise (PN) offset of a BS of the neighbor set to which an idle handoff is to be made is equal to the PN offset of a BS included in the active set list. The PN offset is set different for each BS, and the terminal can perform pilot energy measurement for each BS using the PN offset. Since a maximum of three sectors generally overlap for one PN, the number of BSs included in the active set list used for the check may be limited to two.
When the PN offset of a BS of the neighbor set to which an idle handoff is to be made is equal to the PN offset of a BS included in the active set list, the terminal calculates a difference between the last time at which the BS included in the active set list functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time in step 830.
If the difference is less than predetermined time T2 that is set to prevent an unnecessary handoff, the terminal returns to step 800 to resume pilot energy measurement without performing a handoff. On the other hand, if the difference is greater than the predetermined time T2, the terminal performs a next step for an idle handoff.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the terminal checks if the strength of a pilot signal of the active set satisfies a minimum threshold for a handoff before performing an idle handoff.
In step 840, the terminal measures the pilot energy of the current active set to increase the probability of receiving a paging message in the idle handoff situation. When the measured pilot energy is less than a threshold, the terminal determines that a normal connection cannot be made due to weak energy, even if the terminal enters the traffic state. Thus, the terminal performs an idle handoff in step 870.
On the other hand, if the measured pilot energy is greater than the threshold, the terminal checks if it is in its assigned paging slot in step 850. If the terminal is not in its assigned paging slot, it performs an idle handoff in step 870.
If the terminal is in its assigned paging slot, it checks if there is a General Paging Message (GPM) to be received in step 860. If receiving a
GPMJDOISIE message indicating there are no more paging messages transmitted to the terminal in the assigned paging slot, the terminal goes to step 870 to perform an idle handoff.
However, if the terminal has not yet received the GPM-DONE message, it has to continuously check if there is a paging message to be transmitted during the assigned paging slot. Thus, the terminal performs a handoff after the assigned paging slot has passed.
FIG. 9 is a block diagram of a terminal according to the present invention.
Referring to FIG. 9, a pilot signal receiver 910 receives a pilot channel of a set.
A pilot energy extractor 920 measures the energy of the received pilot channel of the set.
A pilot set energy storing unit 930 stores energies of sets included in a set list managed by the terminal. The newly measured energy of a pilot is stored by modifying the energy of a corresponding set in the set list stored in the pilot set energy storing unit 930. In other words, the pilot set energy storing unit 930 updates the energy of the set with the newly measured energy. A comparator 940 compares the currently measured energy of the set with the energy of the current active set to determine whether a handoff is required.
When the terminal is in the idle state, an idle pilot measurement unit 970 measures the energy of a pilot channel of a set using a pilot channel measurement pattern corresponding to the idle state, i.e., performs energy measurement for a single BS of the active set and at least one (=m) BSs of the neighbor set in the order of A, Ni, A, N2, ..., A, Nm, A, Ni, A, N2, ..., A, Nm...
When the terminal is in the traffic state, a pilot measurement unit 960 performs energy measurement in the order of A, Ni, A, N2, ..., A, Nm, A, Ni, A, N2, ..., A, Nm... using a pilot measurement pattern corresponding to the traffic state.
In other words, the comparator 940 determines whether to perform a handoff based on the measurement result obtained using the pilot measurement pattern determined by the pilot measurement unit 960 or 970.
When the terminal is in the idle state, the comparator 940 compares the measured energies of at least one (=m) BS of the neighbor set with the energy of a BS of the current active set during the search rate control non-applied period, and determines to perform a handoff if the comparison result satisfies a handoff condition. In other words, if there is a BS having pilot energy that is greater by at least 3dB than that of the active set, the comparator 940 determines to perform a handoff.
Namely, the comparator 940 checks the presence of a BS having the greater pilot energy in the neighbor set by measuring the pilot energy of the single BS of the active set and the pilot energies of at least one BS of the neighbor set and checks if the PN offset of the BS of the neighbor set is equal to the PN offset of a BS included in the active set list.
If the PN offsets are equal to each other, the comparator 940 also calculates a difference between the last time at which the BS included in the active set list functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time. If the difference is greater than a threshold, the terminal determines whether the pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold. Next, a handoff unit 950 then performs a handoff to the BS of the neighbor set according to the determination result.
If the pilot energy of the active set is less than the threshold, the handoff unit 950 performs a handoff to the BS of the neighbor set.
If the pilot energy of the active set is greater than the threshold, it is checked if there is a paging message to be received by the pilot signal receiver 910, and then the handoff unit 950 performs a handoff.
When the terminal is in the traffic state, the energy of the candidate set and the energy of the current active set are compared with each other. If it is determined that a handoff is required, a handoff request message is sent to a BS.
If it is determined that a handoff is required, the handoff unit 950 performs the handoff by connecting to radio resources of a BS to which the handoff is to be made.
At this time, for the terminal in the idle state, a handoff is performed if the comparator 940 determines that the handoff is required.
For the terminal in the traffic state, if the comparator 940 determines that a handoff is required, the handoff is performed only when a handoff order message is received in response to the handoff request message sent to the BS.
As described above, according to the present invention, the number of searches for BSs of a neighbor set is increased in a search rate control non- applied period, and a handoff is performed only when a plurality of conditions for the handoff are satisfied. By doing so, when a terminal moves at high speed, is in a region where several BSs overlap, or stays in a zone boundary region for a specific amount of time, the number of idle handoffs and the number of page losses can be reduced, thereby lowering a probability of failing to receive a paging message.
While the invention has been shown and described with reference to an exemplary embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A handoff method for a terminal in an idle state in a mobile communication system, the handoff method comprising: searching for a pilot of a single base station of an active set and pilots of at least one base station of a neighbor set; checking if, among the base stations of the neighbor set, there is a base station having pilot energy that is greater than that of the active set; if there is such a base station in the neighbor set, checking if a pseudo noise offset of the base station of the neighbor set is equal to that of a base station included in an active set list containing previous base stations that have been active sets; if those pseudo noise offsets are equal to each other, calculating a difference between the last time at which a previous base station functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time; and if the difference is greater than threshold time, checking if a pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold and performing a handoff to the base station of the neighbor set.
2. The handoff method of claim 1, wherein the performing of the handoff comprises: if the pilot energy of the active set is less than the threshold, performing a handoff to the base station of the neighbor set; if the pilot energy of the active set is greater than the threshold, checking if the terminal is in its assigned paging slot; and performing the handoff if the terminal is not in its assigned paging slot and checking if there is a paging message to be received from the active set, and then performing the handoff if the terminal is in its assigned paging slot.
3. The handoff method of claim 1, further comprising variably controlling the time required to search for the at least one base station of the neighbor set by searching for the single base station of the active set and the at least one base station of the neighbor set by turns one by one.
4. The handoff method of claim 1, further comprising, if the pseudo noise offsets are not equal to each other, checking if the pilot energy of the active set is less than the threshold and performing the handoff to the base station of the neighbor set.
5. The handoff method of claim 1, further comprising, if there is no base station having the greater pilot energy than that of the active set, determining that the handoff is not necessary, and thus returning to the searching for the base station of the active set.
6. The handoff method of claim 1, further comprising, if the difference is less than the threshold time, determining that the handoff is not necessary and thus returning to the searching for the base station of the active set.
7. A handoff method for a terminal, comprising: the terminal checking if a channel assignment message is received from a base station in order to check its connection state; and the terminal measuring a pilot energy of a single base station of an active set and pilot energies of at least one base station of a neighbor set using different pilot measurement patterns according to the connection state.
8. The handoff method of claim 7, further comprising the terminal performing an idle handoff to a base station of the neighbor set if the measured pilot energy of the base station of the neighbor set is greater by at least 3dB than that of the base station of the active set.
9. The handoff method of claim 7, wherein the measurement comprises measuring the pilot energies of the at least one base station of the neighbor set at the same search rate as that of the active set if the connection state is a traffic state.
10. The handoff method of claim 7, wherein the measurement comprises measuring the pilot energy of the same number of base stations of the neighbor set as the number of base stations of the active set if the connection state is a traffic state.
11. The handoff method of claim 7, wherein the measurement comprises measuring the pilot energies of the at least one base station of the neighbor set at a greater search rate than that of the active set if the connection state is an idle state.
12. The handoff method of claim 11, wherein the measurement comprises measuring the pilot energy of the single base station of the active set and the pilot energies of at least three base stations of the neighbor set if the connection state is an idle state.
13. A terminal that performs a handoff, the terminal comprising: a pilot energy extractor for measuring energy of a received pilot channel; a storing unit for storing the measured pilot energy for an active set and a neighbor set separately; a comparator for reading pilot energies of the active set and the neighbor set from the storing unit and comparing the read pilot energies using different pilot measurement patterns according to the connection state of the terminal; and a handoff unit for determining whether to perform a handoff according to the comparison result.
14. The terminal of claim 13, further comprising at least one pilot measurement unit for checking the connection state of the terminal and measuring a pilot energy of a base station of the active set and pilot energies of at least one base station of the neighbor set using different pilot measurement patterns according to the checked connection state.
15. The terminal of claim 13, further comprising a traffic pilot measurement unit for recognizing that the connection state is a traffic state and measuring the pilot energy of the base station of the active set and the pilot energy of the same number of base stations of the neighbor set as the number of base stations of the active set.
16. The terminal of claim 13, further comprising an idle pilot measurement unit for recognizing that the connection state is an idle state and measuring the pilot energies of the base stations of the neighbor set, the number of base stations being at least three times the number of base stations of the active set.
17. The terminal of claim 13, wherein the storing unit stores the measured pilot energy separately for the active set and the neighbor set using a pseudo noise offset of the received pilot channel.
18. The terminal of claim 13 , wherein the terminal : checks if, among base stations of the neighbor set, there is a base station having pilot energy that is greater than that of the active set, using the comparator; if there is such a base station in the neighbor set, checks if a pseudo noise offset of the base station of the neighbor set is equal to that of a base station included in an active set list containing previous base stations that have been active sets, using the comparator; if those pseudo noise offsets are equal to each other, calculates a difference between the last time at which a previous base station functioned as an active set prior to the current active set and the current time, using the comparator; and if the difference is greater than threshold time, checks if the pilot energy of the active set is less than a threshold using the comparator and performing a handoff to the base station of the neighbor using the handoff unit.
19. The terminal of claim 13, wherein if the comparator determines that the pilot energy of the active set is less than the threshold, the terminal performs the handoff to the base station of the neighbor set, using the handoff unit.
20. The terminal of claim 19, wherein if the comparator determines that the pilot energy of the active set is greater than the threshold, the terminal checks if it is in its assigned paging slot and, if not, performs the handoff using the handoff unit.
21. The terminal of claim 20, wherein if the comparator determines that the pilot energy of the active set is greater than the threshold and the terminal determines that it is in its assigned paging slot, the terminal checks if there is a paging message to be received from the active set and then performs the handoff using the handoff unit.
PCT/KR2007/000220 2006-01-12 2007-01-12 Handoff method and apparatus for terminal based on efficient set management in communication system WO2007081174A1 (en)

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KR10-2007-0003199 2007-01-11
KR1020070003199A KR101344743B1 (en) 2006-01-12 2007-01-11 Handoff method and apparatus for terminal based on efficient set management in communication system

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US6556834B1 (en) * 1998-07-24 2003-04-29 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba CDMA mobile terminal apparatus
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