scholarly journals The characterization of discrete distributions by conditional distributions

1972 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 207-213
Author(s):  
F. A. Haight
2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (A) ◽  
pp. 321-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Glasserman ◽  
David D. Yao

An optimal coupling is a bivariate distribution with specified marginals achieving maximal correlation. We show that optimal couplings are totally positive and, in fact, satisfy a strictly stronger condition we call the nonintersection property. For discrete distributions we illustrate the equivalence between optimal coupling and a certain transportation problem. Specifically, the optimal solutions of greedily-solvable transportation problems are totally positive, and even nonintersecting, through a rearrangement of matrix entries that results in a Monge sequence. In coupling continuous random variables or random vectors, we exploit a characterization of optimal couplings in terms of subgradients of a closed convex function to establish a generalization of the nonintersection property. We argue that nonintersection is not only stronger than total positivity, it is the more natural concept for the singular distributions that arise in coupling continuous random variables.


2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (A) ◽  
pp. 321-332
Author(s):  
Paul Glasserman ◽  
David D. Yao

An optimal coupling is a bivariate distribution with specified marginals achieving maximal correlation. We show that optimal couplings are totally positive and, in fact, satisfy a strictly stronger condition we call the nonintersection property. For discrete distributions we illustrate the equivalence between optimal coupling and a certain transportation problem. Specifically, the optimal solutions of greedily-solvable transportation problems are totally positive, and even nonintersecting, through a rearrangement of matrix entries that results in a Monge sequence. In coupling continuous random variables or random vectors, we exploit a characterization of optimal couplings in terms of subgradients of a closed convex function to establish a generalization of the nonintersection property. We argue that nonintersection is not only stronger than total positivity, it is the more natural concept for the singular distributions that arise in coupling continuous random variables.


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