Branching Random Walk
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A Branching Random Walk is a Stochastic Process that is a combination and generalization of a random walk and of a branching process.
- AKA: Branching Random Walk Process, Branching Random Walk Model.
- Example(s):
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- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Random Variable, Probability Theory, Stochastic Process, Random Walk, Branching Process, Discrete Time, Linear Space, Real Line, Discrete-Time Dynamical System, Brownian Web, Double Fourier Sphere (DFS) Algorithm, Gambler's Ruin Algorithm, Ornstein-Uhlenbeck Process, Walk-on-Spheres (WoS) Algorithm.
References
2021
- (Wikipedia, 2021) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branching_random_walk Retrieved:2021-8-19.
- In probability theory, a branching random walk is a stochastic process that generalizes both the concept of a random walk and of a branching process. At every generation (a point of discrete time), a branching random walk's value is a set of elements that are located in some linear space, such as the real line. Each element of a given generation can have several descendants in the next generation. The location of any descendant is the sum of its parent's location and a random variable.