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In [[mathematics]], the '''Bernoulli scheme''' or '''Bernoulli shift''' is a generalization of the [[Bernoulli process]] to more than two possible outcomes.<ref>P. Shields, ''The theory of Bernoulli shifts'', Univ. Chicago Press  (1973)</ref><ref>Michael S. Keane, "Ergodic theory and subshifts of finite type", (1991), appearing as Chapter 2 in ''Ergodic Theory, Symbolic Dynamics and Hyperbolic Spaces'', Tim Bedford, Michael Keane and Caroline Series, Eds. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1991). ISBN 0-19-853390-X</ref> Bernoulli schemes are important in the study of [[dynamical system]]s, as most such systems (such as [[Axiom A system]]s) exhibit a [[repellor]] that is the product of the [[Cantor set]] and a [[smooth manifold]], and the dynamics on the Cantor set are isomorphic to that of the Bernoulli shift.<ref>Pierre Gaspard, ''Chaos, scattering and statistical mechanics''(1998), Cambridge University press</ref> This is essentially the [[Markov partition]]. The term ''shift'' is in reference to the [[shift operator]], which may be used to study Bernoulli schemes.  The [[Ornstein isomorphism theorem]]<ref>{{springer|author=D.S. Ornstein|title=Ornstein isomorphism theorem|id=Ornstein_isomorphism_theorem&oldid=17997}}</ref> shows that Bernoulli shifts are isomorphic when their [[Kolmogorov entropy|entropy]] is equal. Finite [[stationary stochastic process]]es are isomorphic to the Bernoulli shift; in this sense, Bernoulli shifts are [[universal property|universal]].
 
==Definition==
A Bernoulli scheme is a [[discrete-time]] [[stochastic process]] where each [[statistical independence|independent]] [[random variable]] may take on one of ''N'' distinct possible values, with the outcome ''i'' occurring with probability <math>p_i</math>, with ''i''&nbsp;=&nbsp;1,&nbsp;...,&nbsp;''N'', and
 
:<math>\sum_{i=1}^N p_i = 1. </math>
 
The [[sample space]] is usually denoted as
 
:<math>X=\{1,\ldots,N \}^\mathbb{Z}</math>
 
as a shorthand for
 
:<math>X=\{ x=(\ldots,x_{-1},x_0,x_1,\ldots) :
x_k \in \{1,\ldots,N\} \; \forall k \in \mathbb{Z} \}.</math>
 
The associated [[measure (mathematics)|measure]] is called the '''Bernoulli measure'''<ref>Achim Klenke, ''Probability Theory'' (2006) Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-1-848000-047-6 doi:10.1007/978-1-848000-048-3</ref>
 
:<math>\mu = \{p_1,\ldots,p_N\}^\mathbb{Z}</math>
 
The [[sigma-algebra|&sigma;-algebra]] <math>\mathcal{A}</math> on ''X'' is the product sigma algebra; that is, it is the (countable) [[direct product]] of the σ-algebras of the finite set {1,&nbsp;...,&nbsp;''N''}.  Thus, the triplet
 
:<math>(X,\mathcal{A},\mu)</math>
 
is a [[measure space]]. A basis of <math>\mathcal{A}</math> is the [[cylinder set]]s. Given a cylinder set <math>[x_0, x_1,\ldots,x_n]</math>, its measure is
 
:<math>\mu\left([x_0, x_1,\ldots,x_n]\right)=
\prod_{i=0}^n p_{x_i}</math>
The equivalent expression, using the notation of probability theory, is
:<math>\mu\left([x_0, x_1,\ldots,x_n]\right)=
\mathrm{Pr}(X_0=x_0, X_1=x_1, \ldots, X_n=x_n)</math>
for the random variables <math>\{X_k\}</math>
 
The Bernoulli scheme, as any stochastic process, may be viewed as a [[dynamical system]] by endowing it with the [[shift operator]] ''T'' where
 
:<math>Tx_k = x_{k+1}.</math>
 
Since the outcomes are independent, the shift preserves the measure, and thus ''T'' is a [[measure-preserving transformation]]. The quadruplet
 
:<math>(X,\mathcal{A},\mu, T)</math>
 
is a [[measure-preserving dynamical system]], and is called a '''Bernoulli scheme''' or a '''Bernoulli shift'''. It is often denoted by
 
:<math>BS(p)=BS(p_1,\ldots,p_N).</math>
 
The ''N'' = 2 Bernoulli scheme is called a [[Bernoulli process]].  The Bernoulli shift can be understood as a special case of the [[Markov shift]], where all entries in the [[adjacency matrix]] are one, the corresponding graph thus being a [[clique (graph theory)|clique]].
 
==Generalizations==
Most of the properties of the Bernoulli scheme follow from the countable [[direct product]], rather than from the finite base space.  Thus, one may take the base space to be any [[standard probability space]] <math>(Y,\mathcal{B},\nu)</math>, and define the Bernoulli scheme as
:<math>(X, \mathcal{A}, \mu)=(Y,\mathcal{B},\nu)^\mathbb{Z}</math>
This works because the countable direct product of a standard probability space is again a standard probability space.
 
As a further generalization, one may replace the in integers <math>\mathbb{Z}</math> by a [[countable]] [[discrete group]] <math>G</math>, so that
:<math>(X, \mathcal{A}, \mu)=(Y,\mathcal{B},\nu)^G</math>
For this last case, the shift operator is replaced by the [[group action]]
:<math>gx(f)=x(g^{-1}f)</math>
for group elements <math>f,g\in G</math> and <math>x\in Y^G</math> understood as a function <math>x:G\to Y</math> (any direct product <math>Y^G</math> can be understood to be the set of functions <math>[G\to Y]</math>, as this is the [[exponential object]]). The measure <math>\mu</math> is taken as the [[Haar measure]], which is invariant under the group action:
:<math>\mu(gx)=\mu(x). \, </math>
These generalizations are also commonly called Bernoulli schemes, as they still share most properties with the finite case.
 
==Properties==
[[Ya. Sinai]] demonstrated that the [[Kolmogorov entropy]] of a Bernoulli scheme is given by<ref>Ya.G. Sinai, (1959) "On the Notion of Entropy of a Dynamical System", ''Doklady of Russian Academy of Sciences'' '''124''', pp. 768–771.</ref><ref>Ya. G. Sinai, (2007) "[http://web.math.princeton.edu/facultypapers/Sinai/MetricEntropy2.pdf Metric Entropy of Dynamical System]"</ref>
 
:<math>H = -\sum_{i=1}^N p_i \log p_i .</math>
 
This may be seen as resulting from the general definition of the entropy of a [[Cartesian product]] of probability spaces, which follows from the [[asymptotic equipartition property]].  For the case of a general base space <math>(Y, \mathcal{B}, \nu)</math> (''i.e.'' a base space which is not countable), one typically considers the [[relative entropy]]. So, for example, if one has a countable [[partition of a set|partition]] <math>Y'\subset Y</math> of the base ''Y'', such that <math>\nu(Y')=1</math>, one may define the entropy as
 
:<math>H_{Y'} = -\sum_{y'\in Y'} \nu(y') \log \nu(y') .</math>
 
In general, this entropy will depend on the partition; however, for many [[dynamical system]]s, it is the case that the [[symbolic dynamics]] is independent of the partition (or rather, there are isomorphisms connecting the symbolic dynamics of different partitions, leaving the measure invariant), and so such systems can have a well-defined entropy independent of the partition.
 
The [[Ornstein isomorphism theorem]] states that two Bernoulli schemes with the same entropy are [[isomorphism of dynamical systems|isomorphic]].<ref>Donald Ornstein, "Bernoulli shifts with the same entropy are isomorphic", ''Advances in Math.'' '''4''' (1970), pp.337–352</ref> The result is sharp,<ref>Christopher Hoffman, "[http://www.ams.org/journals/tran/1999-351-10/S0002-9947-99-02446-0/ A K counterexample machine]", ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' '''351''' (1999), pp 4263–4280</ref> in that very similar, non-scheme systems, such as [[Kolmogorov automorphism]]s, do not have this property.
 
The Ornstein isomorphism theorem is in fact considerably deeper: it provides a simple criterion by which many different [[measure-preserving dynamical system]]s can be judged to be isomorphic to Bernoulli schemes.  The result was surprising, as many systems previously believed to be unrelated proved to be isomorphic. These include all finite{{clarify|date=November 2010}} [[stationary stochastic process]]es, [[subshifts of finite type]], finite [[Markov chain]]s, [[Anosov flow]]s, and [[Sinai's billiards]]: these are all isomorphic to Bernoulli schemes.
 
For the generalized case, the Ornstein isomorpism theorem still holds if the group ''G'' is a countably infinite [[amenable group]].
<ref>D. Ornstein and B. Weiss. "Entropy and isomorphism theorems for actions of amenable groups." ''J. Analyse Math.'' '''48''' (1987), pp. 1–141.</ref><ref>Lewis Bowen (2011), "[http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.4424 Every countably infinite group is almost Ornstein]", ArXiv abs/1103.4424</ref>
 
==Bernoulli automorphism==
An invertible, [[measure-preserving transformation]] of a [[standard probability space]] (Lebesgue space) is called a '''Bernoulli automorphism''' if it [[isomorphism of dynamical systems|isomorphic]] to a [[Bernoulli shift]].<ref>Peter Walters (1982) ''An Introduction to Ergodic Theory'', Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-90599-5</ref>
 
==See also==
* [[Shift of finite type]]
* [[Markov chain]]
* [[Hidden Bernoulli model]]
 
==References==
<references/>
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bernoulli Scheme}}
[[Category:Markov models]]
[[Category:Ergodic theory]]
[[Category:Stochastic processes]]
[[Category:Symbolic dynamics]]

Revision as of 10:39, 4 December 2013

In mathematics, the Bernoulli scheme or Bernoulli shift is a generalization of the Bernoulli process to more than two possible outcomes.[1][2] Bernoulli schemes are important in the study of dynamical systems, as most such systems (such as Axiom A systems) exhibit a repellor that is the product of the Cantor set and a smooth manifold, and the dynamics on the Cantor set are isomorphic to that of the Bernoulli shift.[3] This is essentially the Markov partition. The term shift is in reference to the shift operator, which may be used to study Bernoulli schemes. The Ornstein isomorphism theorem[4] shows that Bernoulli shifts are isomorphic when their entropy is equal. Finite stationary stochastic processes are isomorphic to the Bernoulli shift; in this sense, Bernoulli shifts are universal.

Definition

A Bernoulli scheme is a discrete-time stochastic process where each independent random variable may take on one of N distinct possible values, with the outcome i occurring with probability pi, with i = 1, ..., N, and

i=1Npi=1.

The sample space is usually denoted as

X={1,,N}

as a shorthand for

X={x=(,x1,x0,x1,):xk{1,,N}k}.

The associated measure is called the Bernoulli measure[5]

μ={p1,,pN}

The σ-algebra 𝒜 on X is the product sigma algebra; that is, it is the (countable) direct product of the σ-algebras of the finite set {1, ..., N}. Thus, the triplet

(X,𝒜,μ)

is a measure space. A basis of 𝒜 is the cylinder sets. Given a cylinder set [x0,x1,,xn], its measure is

μ([x0,x1,,xn])=i=0npxi

The equivalent expression, using the notation of probability theory, is

μ([x0,x1,,xn])=Pr(X0=x0,X1=x1,,Xn=xn)

for the random variables {Xk}

The Bernoulli scheme, as any stochastic process, may be viewed as a dynamical system by endowing it with the shift operator T where

Txk=xk+1.

Since the outcomes are independent, the shift preserves the measure, and thus T is a measure-preserving transformation. The quadruplet

(X,𝒜,μ,T)

is a measure-preserving dynamical system, and is called a Bernoulli scheme or a Bernoulli shift. It is often denoted by

BS(p)=BS(p1,,pN).

The N = 2 Bernoulli scheme is called a Bernoulli process. The Bernoulli shift can be understood as a special case of the Markov shift, where all entries in the adjacency matrix are one, the corresponding graph thus being a clique.

Generalizations

Most of the properties of the Bernoulli scheme follow from the countable direct product, rather than from the finite base space. Thus, one may take the base space to be any standard probability space (Y,,ν), and define the Bernoulli scheme as

(X,𝒜,μ)=(Y,,ν)

This works because the countable direct product of a standard probability space is again a standard probability space.

As a further generalization, one may replace the in integers by a countable discrete group G, so that

(X,𝒜,μ)=(Y,,ν)G

For this last case, the shift operator is replaced by the group action

gx(f)=x(g1f)

for group elements f,gG and xYG understood as a function x:GY (any direct product YG can be understood to be the set of functions [GY], as this is the exponential object). The measure μ is taken as the Haar measure, which is invariant under the group action:

μ(gx)=μ(x).

These generalizations are also commonly called Bernoulli schemes, as they still share most properties with the finite case.

Properties

Ya. Sinai demonstrated that the Kolmogorov entropy of a Bernoulli scheme is given by[6][7]

H=i=1Npilogpi.

This may be seen as resulting from the general definition of the entropy of a Cartesian product of probability spaces, which follows from the asymptotic equipartition property. For the case of a general base space (Y,,ν) (i.e. a base space which is not countable), one typically considers the relative entropy. So, for example, if one has a countable partition YY of the base Y, such that ν(Y)=1, one may define the entropy as

HY=yYν(y)logν(y).

In general, this entropy will depend on the partition; however, for many dynamical systems, it is the case that the symbolic dynamics is independent of the partition (or rather, there are isomorphisms connecting the symbolic dynamics of different partitions, leaving the measure invariant), and so such systems can have a well-defined entropy independent of the partition.

The Ornstein isomorphism theorem states that two Bernoulli schemes with the same entropy are isomorphic.[8] The result is sharp,[9] in that very similar, non-scheme systems, such as Kolmogorov automorphisms, do not have this property.

The Ornstein isomorphism theorem is in fact considerably deeper: it provides a simple criterion by which many different measure-preserving dynamical systems can be judged to be isomorphic to Bernoulli schemes. The result was surprising, as many systems previously believed to be unrelated proved to be isomorphic. These include all finiteTemplate:Clarify stationary stochastic processes, subshifts of finite type, finite Markov chains, Anosov flows, and Sinai's billiards: these are all isomorphic to Bernoulli schemes.

For the generalized case, the Ornstein isomorpism theorem still holds if the group G is a countably infinite amenable group. [10][11]

Bernoulli automorphism

An invertible, measure-preserving transformation of a standard probability space (Lebesgue space) is called a Bernoulli automorphism if it isomorphic to a Bernoulli shift.[12]

See also

References

  1. P. Shields, The theory of Bernoulli shifts, Univ. Chicago Press (1973)
  2. Michael S. Keane, "Ergodic theory and subshifts of finite type", (1991), appearing as Chapter 2 in Ergodic Theory, Symbolic Dynamics and Hyperbolic Spaces, Tim Bedford, Michael Keane and Caroline Series, Eds. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1991). ISBN 0-19-853390-X
  3. Pierre Gaspard, Chaos, scattering and statistical mechanics(1998), Cambridge University press
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    my web-site http://himerka.com/
  5. Achim Klenke, Probability Theory (2006) Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-1-848000-047-6 doi:10.1007/978-1-848000-048-3
  6. Ya.G. Sinai, (1959) "On the Notion of Entropy of a Dynamical System", Doklady of Russian Academy of Sciences 124, pp. 768–771.
  7. Ya. G. Sinai, (2007) "Metric Entropy of Dynamical System"
  8. Donald Ornstein, "Bernoulli shifts with the same entropy are isomorphic", Advances in Math. 4 (1970), pp.337–352
  9. Christopher Hoffman, "A K counterexample machine", Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 351 (1999), pp 4263–4280
  10. D. Ornstein and B. Weiss. "Entropy and isomorphism theorems for actions of amenable groups." J. Analyse Math. 48 (1987), pp. 1–141.
  11. Lewis Bowen (2011), "Every countably infinite group is almost Ornstein", ArXiv abs/1103.4424
  12. Peter Walters (1982) An Introduction to Ergodic Theory, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-90599-5