Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics

abstract: This dissertation examines six different models in the field of econophysics using interacting particle systems as the basis of exploration. In each model examined, the underlying structure is a graph G = (V , E ), where each x ∈ V represents an individual who is characterized by the numbe...

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Other Authors: Reed, Stephanie J (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53531
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-535312019-05-16T03:01:20Z Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics abstract: This dissertation examines six different models in the field of econophysics using interacting particle systems as the basis of exploration. In each model examined, the underlying structure is a graph G = (V , E ), where each x ∈ V represents an individual who is characterized by the number of coins in her possession at time t. At each time step t, an edge (x, y) ∈ E is chosen at random, resulting in an exchange of coins between individuals x and y according to the rules of the model. Random variables ξt, and ξt(x) keep track of the current configuration and number of coins individual x has at time t respectively. Of particular interest is the distribution of coins in the long run. Considered first are the uniform reshuffling model, immediate exchange model and model with saving propensity. For each of these models, the number of coins an individual can have is nonnegative and the total number of coins in the system is conserved for all time. It is shown here that the distribution of coins converges to the exponential distribution, gamma distribution and a pseudo gamma distribution respectively. The next two models introduce debt, however, the total number of coins again remains fixed. It is shown here that when there is an individual debt limit, the number of coins per individual converges to a shifted exponential distribution. Alternatively, when a collective debt limit is imposed on the whole population, a heuristic argument is given supporting the conjecture that the distribution of coins converges to an asymmetric Laplace distribution. The final model considered focuses on the effect of cooperation on a population. Unlike the previous models discussed here, the total number of coins in the system at any given time is not bounded and the process evolves in continuous time rather than in discrete time. For this model, death of an individual will occur if they run out of coins. It is shown here that the survival probability for the population is impacted by the level of cooperation along with how productive the population is as whole. Dissertation/Thesis Reed, Stephanie J (Author) Lanchier, Nicolas (Advisor) Smith, Hal (Committee member) Gumel, Abba (Committee member) Motsch, Sebastien (Committee member) Camacho, Erika (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Applied mathematics Econophysics Interacting Particle Systems Stochastic Processes eng 108 pages Doctoral Dissertation Mathematics 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53531 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Applied mathematics
Econophysics
Interacting Particle Systems
Stochastic Processes
spellingShingle Applied mathematics
Econophysics
Interacting Particle Systems
Stochastic Processes
Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
description abstract: This dissertation examines six different models in the field of econophysics using interacting particle systems as the basis of exploration. In each model examined, the underlying structure is a graph G = (V , E ), where each x ∈ V represents an individual who is characterized by the number of coins in her possession at time t. At each time step t, an edge (x, y) ∈ E is chosen at random, resulting in an exchange of coins between individuals x and y according to the rules of the model. Random variables ξt, and ξt(x) keep track of the current configuration and number of coins individual x has at time t respectively. Of particular interest is the distribution of coins in the long run. Considered first are the uniform reshuffling model, immediate exchange model and model with saving propensity. For each of these models, the number of coins an individual can have is nonnegative and the total number of coins in the system is conserved for all time. It is shown here that the distribution of coins converges to the exponential distribution, gamma distribution and a pseudo gamma distribution respectively. The next two models introduce debt, however, the total number of coins again remains fixed. It is shown here that when there is an individual debt limit, the number of coins per individual converges to a shifted exponential distribution. Alternatively, when a collective debt limit is imposed on the whole population, a heuristic argument is given supporting the conjecture that the distribution of coins converges to an asymmetric Laplace distribution. The final model considered focuses on the effect of cooperation on a population. Unlike the previous models discussed here, the total number of coins in the system at any given time is not bounded and the process evolves in continuous time rather than in discrete time. For this model, death of an individual will occur if they run out of coins. It is shown here that the survival probability for the population is impacted by the level of cooperation along with how productive the population is as whole. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Mathematics 2019
author2 Reed, Stephanie J (Author)
author_facet Reed, Stephanie J (Author)
title Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
title_short Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
title_full Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
title_fullStr Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
title_full_unstemmed Rigorous Proofs of Old Conjectures and New Results for Stochastic Spatial Models in Econophysics
title_sort rigorous proofs of old conjectures and new results for stochastic spatial models in econophysics
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53531
_version_ 1719183390205280256