학술논문

Doob–Martin compactification of a Markov chain for growing random words sequentially
Document Type
article
Source
Stochastic Processes and their Applications. 127(7)
Subject
Applied Mathematics
Mathematical Sciences
Statistics
Harmonic function
Exchangeability
Bridge
Shuffle
Subword counting
Binomial coefficient
Plackett-Luce model
Vase model
binomial coefficient
bridge
exchangeability
harmonic function
shuffle
sub-word counting
vase model
math.PR
math.CO
05A05
60J10
68R15
Banking
Finance and Investment
Statistics & Probability
Applied mathematics
Language
Abstract
We consider a Markov chain that iteratively generates a sequence of random finite words in such a way that the nth word is uniformly distributed over the set of words of length 2n in which n letters are a and n letters are b: at each step an a and a b are shuffled in uniformly at random among the letters of the current word. We obtain a concrete characterization of the Doob-Martin boundary of this Markov chain and thereby delineate all the ways in which the Markov chain can be conditioned to behave at large times. Writing N(u) for the number of letters a (equivalently, b) in the finite word u, we show that a sequence (un ) n∈ℕ of finite words converges to a point in the boundary if, for an arbitrary word ν, there is convergence as n tends to infinity of the probability that the selection of N(ν) letters a and N(ν) letters b uniformly at random from un and maintaining their relative order results in ν. We exhibit a bijective correspondence between the points in the boundary and ergodic random total orders on the set {a1, b1, a2, b2, …} that have distributions which are separately invariant under finite permutations of the indices of the a's and those of the b's. We establish a further bijective correspondence between the set of such random total orders and the set of pairs (μ, ν) of diffuse probability measures on [0,1] such that ½(μ + ν) is Lebesgue measure: the restriction of the random total order to {a1, b1,…, an, bn } is obtained by taking X1,…, Xn (resp. Y1,… ,Yn ) i.i.d. with common distribution μ (resp. ν), letting (Z1,…, Z2n) be {X1, Y1,…, Xn , Yn } in increasing order, and declaring that the kth smallest element in the restricted total order is ai (resp. bj ) if Zk = Xi (resp. Zk = Yj ).