Simple point process: Difference between revisions

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A simple point process is a special type of point process in probability theory. In simple point processes, every point is assigned the weight one.

Definition

Let S be a locally compact second countable Hausdorff space and let 𝒮 be its Borel σ-algebra. A point process ξ, interpreted as random measure on (S,𝒮), is called a simple point process if it can be written as

ξ=iIδXi

for an index set I and random elements Xi which are almost everywhere pairwise distinct. Here δx denotes the Dirac measure on the point x.

Examples

Simple point processes include many important classes of point processes such as Poisson processes, Cox processes and binomial processes.

Uniqueness

If is a generating ring of 𝒮 then a simple point process ξ is uniquely determined by its values on the sets U. This means that two simple point processes ξ and ζ have the same distributions iff

P(ξ(U)=0)=P(ζ(U)=0) for all U

Literature