An Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes

An Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes

Author: Daryl J. Daley

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-03-14

Total Pages: 720

ISBN-13: 1475720017

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Stochastic point processes are sets of randomly located points in time, on the plane or in some general space. This book provides a general introduction to the theory, starting with simple examples and an historical overview, and proceeding to the general theory. It thoroughly covers recent work in a broad historical perspective in an attempt to provide a wider audience with insights into recent theoretical developments. It contains numerous examples and exercises. This book aims to bridge the gap between informal treatments concerned with applications and highly abstract theoretical treatments.


Infinitely Divisible Point Processes in Rn

Infinitely Divisible Point Processes in Rn

Author: JAY R. Goldman

Publisher:

Published: 1966

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13:

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Recent work on infinitely divisible point processes on the line is generalized to Rn. Two special classes of infinitely divisible point processes, regular and singular processes, are singled out by dependency relations among disjoint sets of Rn. Every stationary infinitely divisible point process is the superposition of a regular and a singular process and all regular processes can be realized as Poisson cluster processes. (Author).


Topics in Infinitely Divisible Distributions and Lévy Processes, Revised Edition

Topics in Infinitely Divisible Distributions and Lévy Processes, Revised Edition

Author: Alfonso Rocha-Arteaga

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-11-02

Total Pages: 135

ISBN-13: 3030227006

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This book deals with topics in the area of Lévy processes and infinitely divisible distributions such as Ornstein-Uhlenbeck type processes, selfsimilar additive processes and multivariate subordination. These topics are developed around a decreasing chain of classes of distributions Lm, m = 0,1,...,∞, from the class L0 of selfdecomposable distributions to the class L∞ generated by stable distributions through convolution and convergence. The book is divided into five chapters. Chapter 1 studies basic properties of Lm classes needed for the subsequent chapters. Chapter 2 introduces Ornstein-Uhlenbeck type processes generated by a Lévy process through stochastic integrals based on Lévy processes. Necessary and sufficient conditions are given for a generating Lévy process so that the OU type process has a limit distribution of Lm class. Chapter 3 establishes the correspondence between selfsimilar additive processes and selfdecomposable distributions and makes a close inspection of the Lamperti transformation, which transforms selfsimilar additive processes and stationary type OU processes to each other. Chapter 4 studies multivariate subordination of a cone-parameter Lévy process by a cone-valued Lévy process. Finally, Chapter 5 studies strictly stable and Lm properties inherited by the subordinated process in multivariate subordination. In this revised edition, new material is included on advances in these topics. It is rewritten as self-contained as possible. Theorems, lemmas, propositions, examples and remarks were reorganized; some were deleted and others were newly added. The historical notes at the end of each chapter were enlarged. This book is addressed to graduate students and researchers in probability and mathematical statistics who are interested in learning more on Lévy processes and infinitely divisible distributions.


An Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes

An Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes

Author: D.J. Daley

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2006-04-10

Total Pages: 487

ISBN-13: 0387215646

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Point processes and random measures find wide applicability in telecommunications, earthquakes, image analysis, spatial point patterns, and stereology, to name but a few areas. The authors have made a major reshaping of their work in their first edition of 1988 and now present their Introduction to the Theory of Point Processes in two volumes with sub-titles Elementary Theory and Models and General Theory and Structure. Volume One contains the introductory chapters from the first edition, together with an informal treatment of some of the later material intended to make it more accessible to readers primarily interested in models and applications. The main new material in this volume relates to marked point processes and to processes evolving in time, where the conditional intensity methodology provides a basis for model building, inference, and prediction. There are abundant examples whose purpose is both didactic and to illustrate further applications of the ideas and models that are the main substance of the text.


Point Processes and Their Statistical Inference

Point Processes and Their Statistical Inference

Author: Alan Karr

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-09-06

Total Pages: 509

ISBN-13: 1351423835

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Maintaining the excellent features that made the first edition so popular, this outstanding reference/text presents the only comprehensive treatment of the theory of point processes and statistical inference for point processes-highlighting both pointprocesses on the real line and sp;,.tial point processes. Thoroughly updated and revised to reflect changes since publication of the firstedition, the expanded Second EdiLion now contains a better organized and easierto-understand treatment of stationary point processes ... expanded treatment ofthe multiplicative intensity model ... expanded treatment of survival analysis . ..broadened consideration of applications ... an expanded and extended bibliographywith over 1,000 references ... and more than 3('() end-of-chapter exercises.


Point Processes

Point Processes

Author: D.R. Cox

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-12-19

Total Pages: 206

ISBN-13: 1351423851

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There has been much recent research on the theory of point processes, i.e., on random systems consisting of point events occurring in space or time. Applications range from emissions from a radioactive source, occurrences of accidents or machine breakdowns, or of electrical impluses along nerve fibres, to repetitive point events in an individual's medical or social history. Sometimes the point events occur in space rather than time and the application here raneg from statistical physics to geography. The object of this book is to develop the applied mathemathics of point processes at a level which will make the ideas accessible both to the research worker and the postgraduate student in probability and statistics and also to the mathemathically inclined individual in another field interested in using ideas and results. A thorough knowledge of the key notions of elementary probability theory is required to understand the book, but specialised "pure mathematical" coniderations have been avoided.