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Offering the first comprehensive treatment of the theory of random
measures, this book has a very broad scope, ranging from basic
properties of Poisson and related processes to the modern theories
of convergence, stationarity, Palm measures, conditioning, and
compensation. The three large final chapters focus on applications
within the areas of stochastic geometry, excursion theory, and
branching processes. Although this theory plays a fundamental role
in most areas of modern probability, much of it, including the most
basic material, has previously been available only in scores of
journal articles. The book is primarily directed towards
researchers and advanced graduate students in stochastic processes
and related areas.
This book is about random objects-sequences, processes, arrays,
measures, functionals-with interesting symmetry properties. Here
symmetry should
beunderstoodinthebroadsenseofinvarianceunderafamily(notnecessarily
a group) of measurable transformations. To be precise, it is not
the random objects themselves but rather their distributions that
are assumed to be symmetric. Though many probabilistic symmetries
are conceivable and have been considered in various contexts, four
of them-stationarity, contractability, exchangeability, and
rotatability-stand out as especially interesting and - portant in
several ways: Their study leads to some deep structural theorems of
great beauty and signi?cance, they are intimately related to some
basic areasofmodernprobabilitytheory,
andtheyaremutuallyconnectedthrough a variety of basic
relationships. The mentioned symmetries may be de?ned as invariance
in distribution under shifts, contractions, permutations, and
rotations. Stationarity being a familiar classical topic, treated
extensively in many standard textbooks and monographs, most of our
attention will be focused on the remaining three basic symmetries.
The study of general probabilistic symmetries essentially
originated with the work of de Finetti (1929-30), who proved by
elementary means (no - vanced tools being yet available) the
celebrated theorem named after him- the fact that every in?nite
sequence of exchangeable events is mixed i.i.d.
Offering the first comprehensive treatment of the theory of random
measures, this book has a very broad scope, ranging from basic
properties of Poisson and related processes to the modern theories
of convergence, stationarity, Palm measures, conditioning, and
compensation. The three large final chapters focus on applications
within the areas of stochastic geometry, excursion theory, and
branching processes. Although this theory plays a fundamental role
in most areas of modern probability, much of it, including the most
basic material, has previously been available only in scores of
journal articles. The book is primarily directed towards
researchers and advanced graduate students in stochastic processes
and related areas.
This book is about random objects-sequences, processes, arrays,
measures, functionals-with interesting symmetry properties. Here
symmetry should
beunderstoodinthebroadsenseofinvarianceunderafamily(notnecessarily
a group) of measurable transformations. To be precise, it is not
the random objects themselves but rather their distributions that
are assumed to be symmetric. Though many probabilistic symmetries
are conceivable and have been considered in various contexts, four
of them-stationarity, contractability, exchangeability, and
rotatability-stand out as especially interesting and - portant in
several ways: Their study leads to some deep structural theorems of
great beauty and signi?cance, they are intimately related to some
basic areasofmodernprobabilitytheory,
andtheyaremutuallyconnectedthrough a variety of basic
relationships. The mentioned symmetries may be de?ned as invariance
in distribution under shifts, contractions, permutations, and
rotations. Stationarity being a familiar classical topic, treated
extensively in many standard textbooks and monographs, most of our
attention will be focused on the remaining three basic symmetries.
The study of general probabilistic symmetries essentially
originated with the work of de Finetti (1929-30), who proved by
elementary means (no - vanced tools being yet available) the
celebrated theorem named after him- the fact that every in?nite
sequence of exchangeable events is mixed i.i.d.
The first edition of this single volume on the theory of
probability has become a highly-praised standard reference for many
areas of probability theory. Chapters from the first edition have
been revised and corrected, and this edition contains four new
chapters. New material covered includes multivariate and ratio
ergodic theorems, shift coupling, Palm distributions, Harris
recurrence, invariant measures, and strong and weak ergodicity.
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