Probability and Statistics Seminar

05/03/2014, 11:30 — 12:30 — Room P3.10, Mathematics Building
António Pacheco, CEMAT and Instituto Superior Técnico
Level Crossing Ordering of Stochastic Processes
Stochastic Ordering is an important area of Applied Probability
tailored for qualitative comparisons of random variables, random
vectors, and stochastic processes. In particular, it may be used to
investigate the impact of parameter changes in important
performance measures of stochastic systems, avoiding exact
computation of those performance measures. In this respect, the
great diversity of performance measures used in applied sciences to
characterize stochastic systems has inspired the proposal of many
types of stochastic orderings.
In this talk we address the level crossing ordering, proposed by
A. Irle and J. Gani in 2001, that compares stochastic processes in
terms of the times they take to reach high levels (states). After
introducing some motivation for the use of the level crossing
ordering, we present tailored sufficient conditions for the level
crossing ordering of (univariate and multivariate) Markov and
semi-Markov processes. These conditions are applied to the
comparison of birth-and- death processes with catastrophes,
queueing networks, and particle systems.
Our analysis highlights the benefits of properly using the
sample path approach, which compares directly trajectories of the
compared processes defined on a common probability space. This
approach provides, as a by-product, the basis for the construction
of algorithms for the simulation of stochastic processes ordered in
the level crossing ordering sense. In the case of continuous Markov
chains, we resort additionally to the powerful uniformization
technique, which uniformizes the rates at which transitions take
place in the processes being compared.
Joint work with Fátima Ferreira (CM-UTAD and Universidade
de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro).


