Abstract-Cooperative relaying introduces spatial diversity through the creation of a virtual antenna array. The vast majority of the research in digital cooperative relaying assumes the modulation level used by both the source and relay to be the same. This assumption does not necessarily hold when adaptive modulation is implemented. In conventional selection combining, the branch with the highest SNR is chosen; we refer to this scheme as SNRbased selection combining (SNR-SC). In this paper, we introduce BER-based selection combining (BER-SC), as an alternative to SNR-SC, to be used in cooperative communications when a relay may use a modulation level different than that of the source. We provide BER performance analysis for the SNR-SC and BER-SC schemes and show that BER-SC significantly outperforms SNR-SC, without any increase in complexity. Moreover, we analytically quantify the gain achieved by using BER-SC over SNR-SC through asymptotic approximation. We note that BER-SC and SNR-SC schemes are identical when the received signals belong to the same modulation level.