Revision as of 14:50, 28 December 2008 by imported>Valentin Clément
An Ito Process is a type of stochastic process described by Japanese mathematician Kiyoshi Ito, which can be written as the sum of the integral of a process over time and of another process over a Brownian Motion.
Those processes are the base of Stochastic Integration, and are therefore widely used in Financial Mathematics and Stochastic Calculus.
Description of the Ito Processes
Let
be a probability space with a filtration
that we consider as complete (that is to say, all sets which measure is equal to zero are contained in
). Let also be
a d-dimensional
- Standard Brownian Motion.
Then we call Ito Process all process
that can be written like :
Where :
is
measurable
is a progressively measurable process such as
almost surely.
is progressively measurable and such as
almost surely.
We note then
the set of Ito Processes. We can also note that all Ito Processes are continuous and adapted to the filtration
. We can also write the Ito Process under a 'differential form' :
Using the fact that the brownian part is a local martingal, and that all continuous local martingal with finite variations equal to zero in zero is indistinguishible of the null process, we can show that this decomposition is unique (except for indistinguishibility) for each Ito Process.
Stochastic Integral with respect to an Ito Process
Let
be an Ito Process. We can define the set of processes
that we can integer with respect to
:
We can then write :
It is important to note that,
. Which means that any Ito Process can be integrated with respect to any other Ito Process. Moreover, the Stochastic Integral with respect to an Ito Process is still an Ito Process. This exceptional stability is one of the reasons of the wide use of Ito Processes. The other reason is the Ito Formula.
Quadratic Variation and Ito's Formula
Quadratic Variation of an Ito Process
Ito's Formula