Vsevolod K. Malinovskii
Level-Crossing Problems and Inverse Gaussian Distributions (eBook, PDF)
Closed-Form Results and Approximations
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Vsevolod K. Malinovskii
Level-Crossing Problems and Inverse Gaussian Distributions (eBook, PDF)
Closed-Form Results and Approximations
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This book focusses on inverse Gaussian approximation for the distribution of the first level-crossing time in a shifted compound renewal process framework.
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This book focusses on inverse Gaussian approximation for the distribution of the first level-crossing time in a shifted compound renewal process framework.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000392920
- Artikelnr.: 62237470
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000392920
- Artikelnr.: 62237470
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Vsevolod K. Malinovskii graduated from the Moscow State University, earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Steklov Mathematical Institute in 1983, and his D.Sc. in Mathematics from the Central conomics and Mathematics Institute (CEMI) of the Russian Academy of Science in 2000. He joined Probability Theory's Department of Steklov Mathematical Institute in 1982 and worked there until 2006. Since 2009, he has been a Chief research fellow at the CEMI.
He was Visiting Professor at the University of Copenhagen in 1993 and in 1998, and at the University of Montreal in 2001. He has authored Insurance Planning Models: Price Competition and Regulation of Financial Stability and Risk Measures and Insurance Solvency Benchmarks: Fixed-Probability Levels in Renewal Risk Models.
Professor Malinovskii's main research interests are in Applied Probability and in Mathematical Statistics.
He was Visiting Professor at the University of Copenhagen in 1993 and in 1998, and at the University of Montreal in 2001. He has authored Insurance Planning Models: Price Competition and Regulation of Financial Stability and Risk Measures and Insurance Solvency Benchmarks: Fixed-Probability Levels in Renewal Risk Models.
Professor Malinovskii's main research interests are in Applied Probability and in Mathematical Statistics.
1. Introduction: Level-Crossing Problem and Related Fields. 1.1. Sums of
independent Random Variables, Gaussian and Inverse Gaussian Distributions.
1.2. Random Walks and Renewal Processes. 1.3. Level-Crossing by a Compound
Renewal Process. 1.4. Closed-form Results and Limit Theorems in
Level-Crossing. 1.5. Message, Agenda, and Target Audience. 2. Inverse
Gaussian and Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distributions. 2.1. Inverse
Gaussian Distribution. 2.2. Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distribution. 3.
Integral Expressions. 3.1. Elementary Integral Expressions. 3.2. Core
Integral Expression. 3.3. Composite Integral Expressions. 4. Distribution
of Compound Renewal Process at a Fixed Time Point. 4.1. Compound Renewal
Process in Continuous Time. 4.2. Closed-form Results. 4.3. Aspects of
Renewal Theory. 4.4. Origin of The Method based on Limit Theorems for Sums.
4.5. Approximation for the Mean. 4.6. Approximation for the Distribution.
4.7. Extensions from Renewal to more General Models. 5. Closed-form Results
for the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.1. Representations of
the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.2. Closed-form Results in
Exponential Case. 5.3. Closed-form Expression for Conditional Probability.
5.4. Type II Formula and Random Walk with Random Displacements. 5.5.
Closed-form Results, When T Is Non-Exponentially Distributed. 5.6. A
Result, When Y Is Mixed Exponential. 6. The Inverse Gaussian Approximation.
6.1. Agenda for This Chapter. 6.2. Statement of Main Results. 6.3.
Shorthand Notation, Structure Lemmas, Identities Specific to a choice of
Arguments, and Centering At Z = 0. 6.4. Expressions of The First Kind. 6.5.
Expressions of The Second Kind. 6.6. Expressions of the third kind 6.7.
Proof of Theorem 6.1. 6.8. Numerical Illustrations. 6.9. Conclusions. 7.
Refinement of the Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 7.1 Asymptotic
Expansions: Rigorous Vs. Heuristic. 7.2. Expansion for the Distribution of
the First Level-Crossing Time. 7.3. Proof of Theorem 7.1. 7.4. Numerical
Illustrations. 8. Derivatives of The First Level-Crossing Time
Distribution. 8.1. The Problem and Its Rationale. 8.2. Approximations for
Derivatives. 8.3. Fundamental Identities for Derivatives with Respect to C
and U. 8.4. Proof of Theorem 8.1. 8.5. Proof of Theorem 8.2. 9. A
Breakthrough in the Level-Crossing Problem. 9.1. Neyman's Cycles in
Level-Crossing Problem. 9.2. Normal Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian
Approximation. 9.3. Diffusion Approximation Versus inverse Gaussian
Approximation: Is there A Mix-Up in This Collation? 9.4. Teugels'
Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 9.5. Conclusions.
Appendices. Index.
independent Random Variables, Gaussian and Inverse Gaussian Distributions.
1.2. Random Walks and Renewal Processes. 1.3. Level-Crossing by a Compound
Renewal Process. 1.4. Closed-form Results and Limit Theorems in
Level-Crossing. 1.5. Message, Agenda, and Target Audience. 2. Inverse
Gaussian and Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distributions. 2.1. Inverse
Gaussian Distribution. 2.2. Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distribution. 3.
Integral Expressions. 3.1. Elementary Integral Expressions. 3.2. Core
Integral Expression. 3.3. Composite Integral Expressions. 4. Distribution
of Compound Renewal Process at a Fixed Time Point. 4.1. Compound Renewal
Process in Continuous Time. 4.2. Closed-form Results. 4.3. Aspects of
Renewal Theory. 4.4. Origin of The Method based on Limit Theorems for Sums.
4.5. Approximation for the Mean. 4.6. Approximation for the Distribution.
4.7. Extensions from Renewal to more General Models. 5. Closed-form Results
for the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.1. Representations of
the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.2. Closed-form Results in
Exponential Case. 5.3. Closed-form Expression for Conditional Probability.
5.4. Type II Formula and Random Walk with Random Displacements. 5.5.
Closed-form Results, When T Is Non-Exponentially Distributed. 5.6. A
Result, When Y Is Mixed Exponential. 6. The Inverse Gaussian Approximation.
6.1. Agenda for This Chapter. 6.2. Statement of Main Results. 6.3.
Shorthand Notation, Structure Lemmas, Identities Specific to a choice of
Arguments, and Centering At Z = 0. 6.4. Expressions of The First Kind. 6.5.
Expressions of The Second Kind. 6.6. Expressions of the third kind 6.7.
Proof of Theorem 6.1. 6.8. Numerical Illustrations. 6.9. Conclusions. 7.
Refinement of the Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 7.1 Asymptotic
Expansions: Rigorous Vs. Heuristic. 7.2. Expansion for the Distribution of
the First Level-Crossing Time. 7.3. Proof of Theorem 7.1. 7.4. Numerical
Illustrations. 8. Derivatives of The First Level-Crossing Time
Distribution. 8.1. The Problem and Its Rationale. 8.2. Approximations for
Derivatives. 8.3. Fundamental Identities for Derivatives with Respect to C
and U. 8.4. Proof of Theorem 8.1. 8.5. Proof of Theorem 8.2. 9. A
Breakthrough in the Level-Crossing Problem. 9.1. Neyman's Cycles in
Level-Crossing Problem. 9.2. Normal Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian
Approximation. 9.3. Diffusion Approximation Versus inverse Gaussian
Approximation: Is there A Mix-Up in This Collation? 9.4. Teugels'
Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 9.5. Conclusions.
Appendices. Index.
1. Introduction: Level-Crossing Problem and Related Fields. 1.1. Sums of
independent Random Variables, Gaussian and Inverse Gaussian Distributions.
1.2. Random Walks and Renewal Processes. 1.3. Level-Crossing by a Compound
Renewal Process. 1.4. Closed-form Results and Limit Theorems in
Level-Crossing. 1.5. Message, Agenda, and Target Audience. 2. Inverse
Gaussian and Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distributions. 2.1. Inverse
Gaussian Distribution. 2.2. Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distribution. 3.
Integral Expressions. 3.1. Elementary Integral Expressions. 3.2. Core
Integral Expression. 3.3. Composite Integral Expressions. 4. Distribution
of Compound Renewal Process at a Fixed Time Point. 4.1. Compound Renewal
Process in Continuous Time. 4.2. Closed-form Results. 4.3. Aspects of
Renewal Theory. 4.4. Origin of The Method based on Limit Theorems for Sums.
4.5. Approximation for the Mean. 4.6. Approximation for the Distribution.
4.7. Extensions from Renewal to more General Models. 5. Closed-form Results
for the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.1. Representations of
the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.2. Closed-form Results in
Exponential Case. 5.3. Closed-form Expression for Conditional Probability.
5.4. Type II Formula and Random Walk with Random Displacements. 5.5.
Closed-form Results, When T Is Non-Exponentially Distributed. 5.6. A
Result, When Y Is Mixed Exponential. 6. The Inverse Gaussian Approximation.
6.1. Agenda for This Chapter. 6.2. Statement of Main Results. 6.3.
Shorthand Notation, Structure Lemmas, Identities Specific to a choice of
Arguments, and Centering At Z = 0. 6.4. Expressions of The First Kind. 6.5.
Expressions of The Second Kind. 6.6. Expressions of the third kind 6.7.
Proof of Theorem 6.1. 6.8. Numerical Illustrations. 6.9. Conclusions. 7.
Refinement of the Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 7.1 Asymptotic
Expansions: Rigorous Vs. Heuristic. 7.2. Expansion for the Distribution of
the First Level-Crossing Time. 7.3. Proof of Theorem 7.1. 7.4. Numerical
Illustrations. 8. Derivatives of The First Level-Crossing Time
Distribution. 8.1. The Problem and Its Rationale. 8.2. Approximations for
Derivatives. 8.3. Fundamental Identities for Derivatives with Respect to C
and U. 8.4. Proof of Theorem 8.1. 8.5. Proof of Theorem 8.2. 9. A
Breakthrough in the Level-Crossing Problem. 9.1. Neyman's Cycles in
Level-Crossing Problem. 9.2. Normal Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian
Approximation. 9.3. Diffusion Approximation Versus inverse Gaussian
Approximation: Is there A Mix-Up in This Collation? 9.4. Teugels'
Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 9.5. Conclusions.
Appendices. Index.
independent Random Variables, Gaussian and Inverse Gaussian Distributions.
1.2. Random Walks and Renewal Processes. 1.3. Level-Crossing by a Compound
Renewal Process. 1.4. Closed-form Results and Limit Theorems in
Level-Crossing. 1.5. Message, Agenda, and Target Audience. 2. Inverse
Gaussian and Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distributions. 2.1. Inverse
Gaussian Distribution. 2.2. Generalized Inverse Gaussian Distribution. 3.
Integral Expressions. 3.1. Elementary Integral Expressions. 3.2. Core
Integral Expression. 3.3. Composite Integral Expressions. 4. Distribution
of Compound Renewal Process at a Fixed Time Point. 4.1. Compound Renewal
Process in Continuous Time. 4.2. Closed-form Results. 4.3. Aspects of
Renewal Theory. 4.4. Origin of The Method based on Limit Theorems for Sums.
4.5. Approximation for the Mean. 4.6. Approximation for the Distribution.
4.7. Extensions from Renewal to more General Models. 5. Closed-form Results
for the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.1. Representations of
the Distribution of First Level-Crossing Time. 5.2. Closed-form Results in
Exponential Case. 5.3. Closed-form Expression for Conditional Probability.
5.4. Type II Formula and Random Walk with Random Displacements. 5.5.
Closed-form Results, When T Is Non-Exponentially Distributed. 5.6. A
Result, When Y Is Mixed Exponential. 6. The Inverse Gaussian Approximation.
6.1. Agenda for This Chapter. 6.2. Statement of Main Results. 6.3.
Shorthand Notation, Structure Lemmas, Identities Specific to a choice of
Arguments, and Centering At Z = 0. 6.4. Expressions of The First Kind. 6.5.
Expressions of The Second Kind. 6.6. Expressions of the third kind 6.7.
Proof of Theorem 6.1. 6.8. Numerical Illustrations. 6.9. Conclusions. 7.
Refinement of the Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 7.1 Asymptotic
Expansions: Rigorous Vs. Heuristic. 7.2. Expansion for the Distribution of
the First Level-Crossing Time. 7.3. Proof of Theorem 7.1. 7.4. Numerical
Illustrations. 8. Derivatives of The First Level-Crossing Time
Distribution. 8.1. The Problem and Its Rationale. 8.2. Approximations for
Derivatives. 8.3. Fundamental Identities for Derivatives with Respect to C
and U. 8.4. Proof of Theorem 8.1. 8.5. Proof of Theorem 8.2. 9. A
Breakthrough in the Level-Crossing Problem. 9.1. Neyman's Cycles in
Level-Crossing Problem. 9.2. Normal Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian
Approximation. 9.3. Diffusion Approximation Versus inverse Gaussian
Approximation: Is there A Mix-Up in This Collation? 9.4. Teugels'
Approximation Versus Inverse Gaussian Approximation. 9.5. Conclusions.
Appendices. Index.