60 research outputs found
Path integral duality and Planck scale corrections to the primordial spectrum in exponential inflation
The enormous red-shifting of the modes during the inflationary epoch suggests
that physics at the Planck scale may modify the standard, nearly,
scale-invariant, primordial, density perturbation spectrum. Under the principle
of path-integral duality, the space-time behaves as though it has a minimal
length (which we shall assume to be of the order of the Planck
length), a feature that is expected to arise when the quantum gravitational
effects on the matter fields have been taken into account. Using the method of
path integral duality, in this work, we evaluate the Planck scale corrections
to the spectrum of density perturbations in the case of exponential inflation.
We find that the amplitude of the corrections is of the order of , where and denote the inflationary
and the Planck energy scales, respectively. We also find that the corrections
turn out to be completely independent of scale. We briefly discuss the
implications of our result, and also comment on how it compares with an earlier
result.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, RevTex4 forma
Do Imports and Exports Adjust Nonlinearly? Evidence from 100 Countries
A country is said to live within its international budget constraint if its exports and imports are cointegrated. Previous studies that tried to verify the cointegration between exports and imports used linear models and supported the theory in almost 50% of countries. In this paper, when we use the nonlinear ARDL approach and asymmetry cointegration method, we support the long-run link between imports and exports in 94 out of 100 countries in our sample. This study is not only the most comprehensive study in the literature, but it is also the first to show that, indeed, trade flows adjust in a nonlinear fashion
The Value of Information for Populations in Varying Environments
The notion of information pervades informal descriptions of biological
systems, but formal treatments face the problem of defining a quantitative
measure of information rooted in a concept of fitness, which is itself an
elusive notion. Here, we present a model of population dynamics where this
problem is amenable to a mathematical analysis. In the limit where any
information about future environmental variations is common to the members of
the population, our model is equivalent to known models of financial
investment. In this case, the population can be interpreted as a portfolio of
financial assets and previous analyses have shown that a key quantity of
Shannon's communication theory, the mutual information, sets a fundamental
limit on the value of information. We show that this bound can be violated when
accounting for features that are irrelevant in finance but inherent to
biological systems, such as the stochasticity present at the individual level.
This leads us to generalize the measures of uncertainty and information usually
encountered in information theory
Maximum Likelihood and Gaussian Estimation of Continuous Time Models in Finance
Published in Handbook of financial time series, 2008, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-71297-8_22</p
Maximum likelihood and Gaussian estimation of continuous time models in finance
Ministry of Education, Singapore under its Academic Research Funding Tier
Gaussian Estimation of Mixed-Order Continuous-Time Dynamic Models with Unobservable Stochastic Trends from Mixed Stock and Flow Data
This paper develops an algorithm for the exact Gaussian estimation of a mixed-order continuous-time dynamic model, with unobservable stochastic trends, from a sample of mixed stock and flow data. Its application yields exact maximum likelihood estimates when the innovations are Brownian motion and either the model is closed or the exogenous variables are polynomials in time of degree not exceeding two, and it can be expected to yield very good estimates under much more general circumstances. The paper includes detailed formulae for the implementation of the algorithm, when the model comprises a mixture of first- and second-order differential equations and both the endogenous and exogenous variables are a mixture of stocks and flows.
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