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by stablechaos
1775 days ago
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Although the application is interesting, as someone who studies SDEs the notion of "reverse SDEs" is frustrating to me, as Brownian motion really isn't reversible. The citation provided is from 1982, but I'm not convinced the theory can't be situated in the more modern interpretation of "backward SDEs" which became more popular with Peng's work in 1992. Backward SDEs aren't time-reversed, but satisfy conditions at the end of the time interval instead of the beginning. The idea of time-reversing Brownian motion is like saying that you're running thermodynamics backward--it only makes sense if you sample them forward, then move backwards along the forward sampled motion. It feels like (2) is just a backward SDE arrived at via the Feynman-Kac theorem applied to the Kolmogorov backward equations. |
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Rediscovery of anomalous diffusion statistics.