Linearly-regular random process
A stationary stochastic process (in the wide sense) $ \xi ( t) $,
$ - \infty < t < \infty $,
for which the regularity condition
$$ \cap _ { t } H _ \xi ( - \infty , t ) = 0 $$
is satisfied, where $ H _ \xi ( - \infty , t ) $ is the mean square closed linear hull of the values $ \xi ( s) $, $ s \leq t $. (Here it is assumed that $ {\mathsf E} \xi ( t) = 0 $.) Regularity implies the impossibility of a (linear) prediction of the process $ \xi ( t) $ in the very distant future; more precisely, if $ \widehat \xi ( t + u ) $ is the best linear prediction for $ \xi ( t + u ) $ with respect to the values $ \xi ( s) $, $ s \leq t $,
$$ {\mathsf E} | \xi ( t + u ) - \widehat \xi ( t + u ) | ^ {2} = \ \min _ {\eta \in H _ \xi ( - \infty , t ) } \ {\mathsf E} | \xi ( t + u ) - \eta | ^ {2} , $$
then
$$ \lim\limits _ {u \rightarrow \infty } \widehat \xi ( t + u ) = 0 . $$
A necessary and sufficient condition for regularity of a (one-dimensional) stationary process is the existence of a spectral density $ f ( \lambda ) $ such that
$$ \int\limits _ {- \infty } ^ \infty \frac{ \mathop{\rm ln} f ( \lambda ) }{1 + \lambda ^ {2} } d \lambda > - \infty . $$
The analytic conditions for regularity of multi-dimensional and infinite-dimensional stationary processes are more complicated. In the general case, when the spectral density $ f ( \lambda ) $ is a positive operator function in Hilbert space, the regularity condition is equivalent to the fact that $ f ( \lambda ) $ admits a factorization of the form
$$ f ( \lambda ) = \phi ^ {*} ( \lambda ) \phi ( \lambda ) , $$
where $ \phi ( \lambda ) $, $ - \infty < \lambda < \infty $, is the boundary value of an operator function $ \phi ( \lambda + i \mu ) $, $ \mu \rightarrow 0 $, that is analytic in the lower half-plane $ z = \lambda + i \mu $, $ \mu < 0 $.
Every process $ \zeta ( t) $ that is stationary in the wide sense admits a decomposition into an orthogonal sum
$$ \zeta ( t) = \xi ( t) + \eta ( t) , $$
$$ {\mathsf E} \xi ( t) \overline{ {\eta ( t) }}\; = 0 , $$
where $ \xi ( t) $ is a linearly-regular process and $ \eta ( t) $ is a linearly-singular process, that is, a stochastic process that is stationary in the wide sense and for which
$$ \cap _ { t } H _ \eta ( - \infty , t ) = H _ \eta ( - \infty , \infty ) ; $$
also,
$$ H _ \xi ( - \infty , t ) \subset H _ \zeta ( - \infty , t ) \ \ \textrm{ and } \ H _ \eta ( - \infty , t ) \subset H _ \zeta ( - \infty , t) $$
for all $ t $.
References
[1] | Yu.A. Rozanov, "Stationary random processes" , Holden-Day (1967) (Translated from Russian) |
[2] | Yu.A. Rozanov, "Innovation processes" , Wiley (1977) (Translated from Russian) |
Comments
One says more often purely non-deterministic process (in the wide sense) instead of linearly-regular process. The decomposition of a (second-order) process in a regular and a singular part (as in the main article) is known as the Wold decomposition.
References
[a1] | I.A. Ibragimov, Yu.V. Linnik, "Independent and stationary sequences of random variables" , Wolters-Noordhoff (1971) (Translated from Russian) |
[a2] | J.L. Doob, "Stochastic processes" , Chapman & Hall (1953) |
[a3] | I.A. Ibragimov, Yu.A. Rozanov, "Gaussian random processes" , Springer (1978) (Translated from Russian) |
Linearly-regular random process. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Linearly-regular_random_process&oldid=47668