Birth process

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birth process
A birth process with birth rates λ0,λ1,λ2,....

In probability theory, a birth process or a pure birth process[1] is a special case of a continuous-time Markov process and a generalisation of a Poisson process. It defines a continuous process which takes values in the natural numbers and can only increase by one (a "birth") or remain unchanged. This is a type of birth–death process with no deaths. The rate at which births occur is given by an exponential random variable whose parameter depends only on the current value of the process

Definition

Birth rates definition

A birth process with birth rates (λn,n) and initial value k is a minimal right-continuous process (Xt,t0) such that X0=k and the interarrival times Ti=inf{t0:Xt=i+1}inf{t0:Xt=i} are independent exponential random variables with parameter λi.[2]

Infinitesimal definition

A birth process with rates (λn,n) and initial value k is a process (Xt,t0) such that:

  • X0=k
  • s,t0:s<tXsXt
  • (Xt+h=Xt+1)=λXth+o(h)
  • (Xt+h=Xt)=o(h)
  • s,t0:s<tXtXs is independent of (Xu,u<s)

(The third and fourth conditions use little o notation.) These conditions ensure that the process starts at i, is non-decreasing and has independent single births continuously at rate λn, when the process has value n.[3]

Continuous-time Markov chain definition

A birth process can be defined as a continuous-time Markov process (CTMC) (Xt,t0) with the non-zero Q-matrix entries qn,n+1=λn=qn,n and initial distribution i (the random variable which takes value i with probability 1).[4] Q=(λ0λ0000λ1λ1000λ2λ2)

Variations

Some authors require that a birth process start from 0 i.e. that X0=0,[3] while others allow the initial value to be given by a probability distribution on the natural numbers.[2] The state space can include infinity, in the case of an explosive birth process.[2] The birth rates are also called intensities.[3]

Properties

As for CTMCs, a birth process has the Markov property. The CTMC definitions for communicating classes, irreducibility and so on apply to birth processes. By the conditions for recurrence and transience of a birth–death process,[5] any birth process is transient. The transition matrices ((pi,j(t))i,j),t0) of a birth process satisfy the Kolmogorov forward and backward equations. The backwards equations are:[6]

p'i,j(t)=λi(pi+1,j(t)pi,j(t)) (for i,j)

The forward equations are:[7]

p'i,i(t)=λipi,i(t) (for i)
p'i,j(t)=λj1pi,j1(t)λjpi,j(t) (for ji+1)

From the forward equations it follows that:[7]

pi,i(t)=eλit (for i)
pi,j(t)=λj1eλjt0teλjspi,j1(s)ds (for ji+1)

Unlike a Poisson process, a birth process may have infinitely many births in a finite amount of time. We define T=sup{Tn:n} and say that a birth process explodes if T is finite. If n=01λn< then the process is explosive with probability 1; otherwise, it is non-explosive with probability 1 ("honest").[8][9]

Examples

Poisson process
A Poisson process is a special case of a birth process.

A Poisson process is a birth process where the birth rates are constant i.e. λn=λ for some λ>0.[3]

Simple birth process

Simple birth process
A simple birth process, where birth rates are equal to the size of the current population.

A simple birth process is a birth process with rates λn=nλ.[10] It models a population in which each individual gives birth repeatedly and independently at rate λ. Udny Yule studied the processes, so they may be known as Yule processes.[11] The number of births in time t from a simple birth process of population n is given by:[3]

pn,n+m(t)=(nm)(λt)m(1λt)nm+o(h)

In exact form, the number of births is the negative binomial distribution with parameters n and eλt. For the special case n=1, this is the geometric distribution with success rate eλt.[12] The expectation of the process grows exponentially; specifically, if X0=1 then 𝔼(Xt)=eλt.[10] A simple birth process with immigration is a modification of this process with rates λn=nλ+ν. This models a population with births by each population member in addition to a constant rate of immigration into the system.[3]

Notes

  1. Upton & Cook (2014), birth-and-death process.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Norris (1997), p. 81.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Grimmett & Stirzaker (1992), p. 232.
  4. Norris (1997), p. 81–82.
  5. Karlin & McGregor (1957).
  6. Ross (2010), p. 386.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Ross (2010), p. 389.
  8. Norris (1997), p. 83.
  9. Grimmett & Stirzaker (1992), p. 234.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Norris (1997), p. 82.
  11. Ross (2010), p. 375.
  12. Ross (2010), p. 383.

References

  • Grimmett, G. R.; Stirzaker, D. R. (1992). Probability and Random Processes (second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198572220.
  • Karlin, Samuel; McGregor, James (1957). "The classification of birth and death processes" (PDF). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 86 (2): 366–400.
  • Norris, J.R. (1997). Markov Chains. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511810633.
  • Ross, Sheldon M. (2010). Introduction to Probability Models (tenth ed.). Academic Press. ISBN 9780123756862.
  • Upton, G.; Cook, I. (2014). A Dictionary of Statistics (third ed.). ISBN 9780191758317.