Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introductory remarks
- 2 Individual and statistical descriptions
- 3 Probability and events
- 4 Finite random variables and stochastic processes
- 5 The Pólya process
- 6 Time evolution and finite Markov chains
- 7 The Ehrenfest–Brillouin model
- 8 Applications to stylized models in economics
- 9 Finitary characterization of the Ewens sampling formula
- 10 The Zipf–Simon–Yule process
- Appendix: Solutions to exercises
- Author index
- Subject index
- References
7 - The Ehrenfest–Brillouin model
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introductory remarks
- 2 Individual and statistical descriptions
- 3 Probability and events
- 4 Finite random variables and stochastic processes
- 5 The Pólya process
- 6 Time evolution and finite Markov chains
- 7 The Ehrenfest–Brillouin model
- 8 Applications to stylized models in economics
- 9 Finitary characterization of the Ewens sampling formula
- 10 The Zipf–Simon–Yule process
- Appendix: Solutions to exercises
- Author index
- Subject index
- References
Summary
Before studying this chapter, the reader is advised to (re-)read Section 6.1.4. In fact, the present chapter is devoted to a generalization of that example where random ‘destructions’ are followed by ‘creations’ whose probability is no longer uniform over all the categories, but follows a rule due to L. Brillouin and directly related to the Pólya distribution discussed in Chapter 5.
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
• use random destructions (à la Ehrenfest) and Pólya distributed creations (à la Brillouin) to study the kinematics of a system of n elements moving within g categories;
• define unary, binary, …, m-ary moves;
• write the appropriate transition probabilities for these moves;
• use detailed balance to find the invariant distribution for the Ehrenfest–Brillouin Markov chain;
• discuss some applications to economics, finance and physics illustrating the generality of the Ehrenfest–Brillouin approach.
Merging Ehrenfest-like destructions and Brillouin-like creations
Statistical physics studies the macroscopic properties of physical systems at the human scale in terms of the properties of microscopic constituents. In 1996, Aoki explicitly used such a point of view in economics, in order to describe macro variables in terms of large collections of interacting microeconomic entities (agents, firms, and so on). These entities are supposed to change their state unceasingly, ruled by a Markov-chain probabilistic dynamics.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Finitary Probabilistic Methods in Econophysics , pp. 172 - 203Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010