Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- PART I THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- 1 Preliminaries
- 2 Martingales
- 3 Fourier and Laplace transformations
- 4 Abstract Wiener–Fréchet spaces
- 5 Two concepts of no-anticipation in time
- 6 †Malliavin calculus on real sequences
- 7 Introduction to poly-saturated models of mathematics
- 8 Extension of the real numbers and properties
- 9 Topology
- 10 Measure and integration on Loeb spaces
- PART II AN INTRODUCTION TO FINITE- AND INFINITE-DIMENSIONAL STOCHASTIC ANALYSIS
- PART III MALLIAVIN CALCULUS
- APPENDICES: EXISTENCE OF POLY-SATURATED MODELS
- References
- Index
6 - †Malliavin calculus on real sequences
from PART I - THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- PART I THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
- 1 Preliminaries
- 2 Martingales
- 3 Fourier and Laplace transformations
- 4 Abstract Wiener–Fréchet spaces
- 5 Two concepts of no-anticipation in time
- 6 †Malliavin calculus on real sequences
- 7 Introduction to poly-saturated models of mathematics
- 8 Extension of the real numbers and properties
- 9 Topology
- 10 Measure and integration on Loeb spaces
- PART II AN INTRODUCTION TO FINITE- AND INFINITE-DIMENSIONAL STOCHASTIC ANALYSIS
- PART III MALLIAVIN CALCULUS
- APPENDICES: EXISTENCE OF POLY-SATURATED MODELS
- References
- Index
Summary
Although the techniques in this chapter can be used to establish the general Malliavin calculus later on, it is possible to jump to the next chapter. Only the techniques in this chapter, not the results, are used later.
Following, we deal with calculus for discrete Lévy processes. In an application we obtain Malliavin calculus for Poisson processes and for Brownian motion with values in abstract Wiener spaces over ‘little’ l2. To obtain similar results for Lévy processes defined on the continuous timeline [0, ∞[, and for Brownian motion with values in abstract Wiener spaces over any separable Hilbert space, the space ℝℕ is replaced by an extension *(ℝℕ) of ℝℕ and ℕ is replaced by [0, ∞[. We will identify two separable Hilbert spaces only if there exists a canonical, i.e., basis independent, isomorphic isometry between them.
The seminal paper of Malliavin was designed to study smoothness of solutions to stochastic differential equations. Here the Itô integral and Malliavin derivative are used to obtain the Clark–Ocone formula. This formula plays an important role in mathematics of finance (cf. Aase et al. and Di Nunno et al.).
Smolyanov and von Weizsäcker use differentiability to study measures on ℝℕ. They admit products of different measures. In contrast to their work, our approach is based on chaos decomposition, and measures are included which are not necessarily smooth. However, each measure has to be the product of a single fixed Borel measure on ℝ.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012