KR20160083089A

5G,4G,3G,2G

Title

DISCONTINUOUS RECEPTION(DRX) ALIGNMENT TECHNIQUES FOR DUAL-CONNECTIVITY ARCHITECTURES

Application Number:

KR20167014978

Publication Date:

11-07-2016

Current Assignee:

Family ID:

Application Date:

06-01-2015

Declaring Company:

Publication Country:

US

Priority Date:

06-01-2014

Title

DISCONTINUOUS RECEPTION(DRX) ALIGNMENT TECHNIQUES FOR DUAL-CONNECTIVITY ARCHITECTURES

Application Number:

KR20167014978

Family ID:

Publication Country:

US

Publication Date:

11-07-2016

Application Date:

06-01-2015

Priority Date:

06-01-2014

Current Assignee:

Declaring Company:

Abstract  Abstract

Discontinuous reception (DRX) alignment techniques for dual-access architectures are described. In one embodiment, for example, a user equipment (UE) may include one or more radio frequency (RF) transceivers, one or more RF antennas, and logic, at least a portion of which is hardware, The logic receives a radio resource control (RRC) configuration information message including a small cell RRC configuration information element (IE), and the small cell RRC configuration IE includes one or more inter-cell-coordinated small cell DRX Cell discontinuous reception (DRX) configuration IE that includes parameters that determine a start time for a small cell DRX cycle based on at least one of one or more intercell-adjusted small cell DRX parameters, And starts the small cell DRX cycle at the determined start time. Other embodiments are described and claimed.

Note:

The information in blue was extracted from the third parties (Standard Setting Organisation, Espacenet)

The information in grey was provided by the patent holder

The information in purple was extracted from the FrandAvenue

Explicitly disclosed patent:openly and comprehensibly describes all details of the invention in the patent document.

Implicitly disclosed patent:does not explicitly state certain aspects of the invention, but still allows for these to be inferred from the information provided.

Basis patent:The core patent in a family, outlining the fundamental invention from which related patents or applications originate.

Family member:related patents or applications that share a common priority or original filing.