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2011 Regular $g$-measures are not always Gibbsian
Roberto Fernandez, Sandro Gallo, Gregory Maillard
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Electron. Commun. Probab. 16: 732-740 (2011). DOI: 10.1214/ECP.v16-1681

Abstract

Regular $g$-measures are discrete-time processes determined by conditional expectations with respect to the past. One-dimensional Gibbs measures, on the other hand, are fields determined by simultaneous conditioning on past and future. For the Markovian and exponentially continuous cases both theories are known to be equivalent. Its equivalence for more general cases was an open problem. We present a simple example settling this issue in a negative way: there exist $g$-measures that are continuous and non-null but are not Gibbsian. Our example belongs, in fact, to a well-studied family of processes with rather nice attributes: It is a chain with variable-length memory, characterized by the absence of phase coexistence and the existence of a visible renewal scheme

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Roberto Fernandez. Sandro Gallo. Gregory Maillard. "Regular $g$-measures are not always Gibbsian." Electron. Commun. Probab. 16 732 - 740, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1214/ECP.v16-1681

Information

Accepted: 20 November 2011; Published: 2011
First available in Project Euclid: 7 June 2016

zbMATH: 1254.60037
MathSciNet: MR2861437
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/ECP.v16-1681

Subjects:
Primary: 60G10
Secondary: 37A05 , 82B20

Keywords: $g$-measures , chains with complete connections , chains with variable-length memory , Discrete-time stochastic processes , Non-Gibbsianness

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