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Nearly completely decomposable Markov chain
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In probability theory, a nearly completely decomposable (NCD) Markov chain is a Markov chain where the state space can be partitioned in such a way that movement within a partition occurs much more frequently than movement between partitions.[1] Particularly efficient algorithms exist to compute the stationary distribution of Markov chains with this property.[2]
Definition
Ando and Fisher define a completely decomposable matrix as one where "an identical rearrangement of rows and columns leaves a set of square submatrices on the principal diagonal and zeros everywhere else." A nearly completely decomposable matrix is one where an identical rearrangement of rows and columns leaves a set of square submatrices on the principal diagonal and small nonzeros everywhere else.[3][4]
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Example
Summarize
Perspective
A Markov chain with transition matrix
is nearly completely decomposable if ε is small (say 0.1).[5]
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Stationary distribution algorithms
Special-purpose iterative algorithms have been designed for NCD Markov chains[2] though the multi–level algorithm, a general purpose algorithm,[6] has been shown experimentally to be competitive and in some cases significantly faster.[7]
See also
References
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