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  2. Stochastic matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_matrix

    A doubly stochastic matrix is a square matrix of nonnegative real numbers with each row and column summing to 1. A substochastic matrix is a real square matrix whose row sums are all ; In the same vein, one may define a probability vector as a vector whose elements are nonnegative real numbers which sum to 1. Thus, each row of a right ...

  3. List of named matrices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_matrices

    Doubly stochastic matrix — a non-negative matrix such that each row and each column sums to 1 (thus the matrix is both left stochastic and right stochastic) Fisher information matrix — a matrix representing the variance of the partial derivative, with respect to a parameter, of the log of the likelihood function of a random variable.

  4. Stochastic geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_geometry

    A possible stochastic geometry model (Boolean model) for wireless network coverage and connectivity constructed from randomly sized disks placed at random locations. In mathematics, stochastic geometry is the study of random spatial patterns. At the heart of the subject lies the study of random point patterns.

  5. Stochastic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic

    The term stochastic process first appeared in English in a 1934 paper by Joseph L. Doob. [1] For the term and a specific mathematical definition, Doob cited another 1934 paper, where the term stochastischer Prozeß was used in German by Aleksandr Khinchin, [22] [23] though the German term had been used earlier in 1931 by Andrey Kolmogorov. [24]

  6. Majorization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorization

    Figure 1. 2D majorization example. For , , we have if and only if is in the convex hull of all vectors obtained by permuting the coordinates of .This is equivalent to saying that = for some doubly stochastic matrix. [2]:

  7. Markov kernel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markov_kernel

    In probability theory, a Markov kernel (also known as a stochastic kernel or probability kernel) is a map that in the general theory of Markov processes plays the role that the transition matrix does in the theory of Markov processes with a finite state space.

  8. Doubly stochastic matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doubly_stochastic_matrix

    The class of doubly stochastic matrices is a convex polytope known as the Birkhoff polytope.Using the matrix entries as Cartesian coordinates, it lies in an ()-dimensional affine subspace of -dimensional Euclidean space defined by independent linear constraints specifying that the row and column sums all equal 1.

  9. Ergodicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergodicity

    The mathematical definition of ergodicity aims to capture ordinary every-day ideas about randomness.This includes ideas about systems that move in such a way as to (eventually) fill up all of space, such as diffusion and Brownian motion, as well as common-sense notions of mixing, such as mixing paints, drinks, cooking ingredients, industrial process mixing, smoke in a smoke-filled room, the ...