370 research outputs found
Upper tails of self-intersection local times of random walks: survey of proof techniques
The asymptotics of the probability that the self-intersection local time of a
random walk on exceeds its expectation by a large amount is a
fascinating subject because of its relation to some models from Statistical
Mechanics, to large-deviation theory and variational analysis and because of
the variety of the effects that can be observed. However, the proof of the
upper bound is notoriously difficult and requires various sophisticated
techniques. We survey some heuristics and some recently elaborated techniques
and results. This is an extended summary of a talk held on the CIRM-conference
on {\it Excess self-intersection local times, and related topics} in Luminy,
6-10 Dec., 2010.Comment: 11 page
Attraction time for strongly reinforced walks
We consider a class of strongly edge-reinforced random walks, where the
corresponding reinforcement weight function is nondecreasing. It is known, from
Limic and Tarr\`{e}s [Ann. Probab. (2007), to appear], that the attracting edge
emerges with probability 1 whenever the underlying graph is locally bounded. We
study the asymptotic behavior of the tail distribution of the (random) time of
attraction. In particular, we obtain exact (up to a multiplicative constant)
asymptotics if the underlying graph has two edges. Next, we show some
extensions in the setting of finite graphs, and infinite graphs with bounded
degree. As a corollary, we obtain the fact that if the reinforcement weight has
the form , , then (universally over finite graphs) the
expected time to attraction is infinite if and only if
.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AAP564 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
How to make Dupire's local volatility work with jumps
There are several (mathematical) reasons why Dupire's formula fails in the
non-diffusion setting. And yet, in practice, ad-hoc preconditioning of the
option data works reasonably well. In this note we attempt to explain why. In
particular, we propose a regularization procedure of the option data so that
Dupire's local vol diffusion process recreates the correct option prices, even
in manifest presence of jumps
Sharp Bounds in Stochastic Network Calculus
The practicality of the stochastic network calculus (SNC) is often questioned
on grounds of potential looseness of its performance bounds. In this paper it
is uncovered that for bursty arrival processes (specifically Markov-Modulated
On-Off (MMOO)), whose amenability to \textit{per-flow} analysis is typically
proclaimed as a highlight of SNC, the bounds can unfortunately indeed be very
loose (e.g., by several orders of magnitude off). In response to this uncovered
weakness of SNC, the (Standard) per-flow bounds are herein improved by deriving
a general sample-path bound, using martingale based techniques, which
accommodates FIFO, SP, EDF, and GPS scheduling. The obtained (Martingale)
bounds gain an exponential decay factor of in
the number of flows . Moreover, numerical comparisons against simulations
show that the Martingale bounds are remarkably accurate for FIFO, SP, and EDF
scheduling; for GPS scheduling, although the Martingale bounds substantially
improve the Standard bounds, they are numerically loose, demanding for
improvements in the core SNC analysis of GPS
Quantum description of spherical spins
The spherical model for spins describes ferromagnetic phase transitions well,
but it fails at low temperatures. A quantum version of the spherical model is
proposed. It does not induce qualitative changes near the phase transition.
However, it produces a physical low temperature behavior. The entropy is
non-negative. Model parameters can be adapted to the description of real
quantum spins. Several applications are discussed. Zero-temperature quantum
phase transitions are analyzed for a ferromagnet and a spin glass in a
transversal field. Their crossover exponents are presented.Comment: 4 pages postscript. Revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Comparing Free Hand Menu Techniques for Distant Displays using Linear, Marking and Finger-Count Menus
Part 1: Long and Short PapersInternational audienceDistant displays such as interactive Public Displays (IPD) or Interactive Television (ITV) require new interaction techniques as traditional input devices may be limited or missing in these contexts. Free hand interaction, as sensed with computer vision techniques, presents a promising interaction technique. This paper presents the adaptation of three menu techniques for free hand interaction: Linear menu, Marking menu and Finger-Count menu. The first study based on a Wizard-of-OZ protocol focuses on Finger-Counting postures in front of interactive television and public displays. It reveals that participants do choose the most efficient gestures neither before nor after the experiment. Results are used to develop a Finger-Count recognizer. The second experiment shows that all techniques achieve satisfactory accuracy. It also shows that Finger-Count requires more mental demand than other techniques.</p
Avoided Critical Behavior in a Uniformly Frustrated System
We study the effects of weak long-ranged antiferromagnetic interactions of
strength on a spin model with predominant short-ranged ferromagnetic
interactions. In three dimensions, this model exhibits an avoided critical
point in the sense that the critical temperature is strictly greater
than . The behavior of this system at temperatures less
than is controlled by the proximity to the avoided critical point.
We also quantize the model in a novel way to study the interplay between
charge-density wave and superconducting order.Comment: 32 page Latex file, figures available from authors by reques
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