- Vendor: Mia Karts
Introduction to Stochastic Integration (Universitext)
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Free international shipping on orders over $99
All orders are dispatched the next business day!
Competitive Pricing You Can Trust — Quality You Can Rely On.
ISBN: 0387287205
Author: Kuo, Hui-Hsiung
Condition: New
In the Leibniz-Newton calculus, one learns the di?erentiation and integration of deterministic functions. A basic theorem in di?erentiation is the chain rule, which gives the derivative of a composite of two di?erentiable functions. The chain rule, when written in an inde?nite integral form, yields the method of substitution. In advanced calculus, the Riemann-Stieltjes integral is de?ned through the same procedure of partition-evaluation-summation-limit as in the Riemann integral. In dealing with random functions such as functions of a Brownian motion, the chain rule for the Leibniz-Newton calculus breaks down. A Brownian motionmovessorapidlyandirregularlythatalmostallofitssamplepathsare nowhere di?erentiable. Thus we cannot di?erentiate functions of a Brownian motion in the same way as in the Leibniz-Newton calculus. In 1944 Kiyosi It o published the celebrated paper Stochastic Integral in the Proceedings of the Imperial Academy (Tokyo). It was the beginning of the It o calculus, the counterpart of the Leibniz-Newton calculus for random functions. In this six-page paper, It o introduced the stochastic integral and a formula, known since then as It os formula. The It o formula is the chain rule for the Itocalculus.Butitcannotbe expressed as in the Leibniz-Newton calculus in terms of derivatives, since a Brownian motion path is nowhere di?erentiable. The It o formula can be interpreted only in the integral form. Moreover, there is an additional term in the formula, called the It o correction term, resulting from the nonzero quadratic variation of a Brownian motion.
Have a question?

Introduction to Stochastic Integration (Universitext)

