Birth death swap population in random environment and aggregation with two timescales
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6115251
DOI10.1016/j.spa.2023.04.017zbMath1524.60098arXiv1803.00790OpenAlexW2998041311MaRDI QIDQ6115251
Nicole El Karoui, Sarah Kaakaï
Publication date: 12 July 2023
Published in: Stochastic Processes and their Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.00790
point processesrandom environmentaveragingstable convergenceheterogeneous population dynamicsSDEs driven by Poisson measures
Interacting random processes; statistical mechanics type models; percolation theory (60K35) Population dynamics (general) (92D25) Branching processes (Galton-Watson, birth-and-death, etc.) (60J80) Point processes (e.g., Poisson, Cox, Hawkes processes) (60G55)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The effect of competition and horizontal trait inheritance on invasion, fixation, and polymorphism
- Spatial birth-death swap chains
- Calcul stochastique et problèmes de martingales
- Stochastic ordering and thinning of point processes
- Statistical analysis of counting processes
- On the convergence of point processes
- Almost sure comparison of birth and death processes with application to M/M/s queueing systems
- Point processes and queues. Martingale dynamics
- On mixing and stability of limit theorems
- Stability results for a general class of interacting point processes dynamics, and applications
- A microscopic probabilistic description of a locally regulated population and macroscopic approximations
- Uniform sampling in a structured branching population
- Compensators and Cox convergence
- Multivariate point processes: predictable projection, Radon-Nikodym derivatives, representation of martingales
- [https://portal.mardi4nfdi.de/wiki/Publication:4131394 Repr�sentation des processus ponctuels multivari�s � l'aide d'un processus de Poisson]
- Lattice birth-and-death processes
- Stable Convergence and Stable Limit Theorems
- Stochastic Models for Structured Populations
- A density-dependent model describing age-structured population dynamics using hawk–dove tactics