The notion of martingales and related concepts seem to have originated in
studies of games of chance. Certain patterns were identified and extended to moregeneral sequences of random variables. The resulting abstract theory provides a basis for many applications, both theoretical and practical.
The concept, examples, and basic patterns
A classical example
The notion of martingales and related concepts seem to have originated in
studies of games of chance similar to the following. Suppose
-
a gambler's “gain” on the
n th play of a game
-
the original capital or “bankroll”
Set
for
. Thus,
X
n is the capital after
n plays, and
Put
and
.
For any
,
and
or, equivalently,
. Hence
If
Y
N is an independent class with
, the game
is considered
fair . In this case, we have by
(CE5) ,
(CE7) , and hypothesis
Also
Gamblers seek to develop a “system” to improve expected earnings. We examine some
typical approaches and show their futility. To keep the analysis simple, consider asimple coin-flipping game. Let
-
event of a “head” on the
k th component trial
-
event of a “tail” on the
k th component trial
The player has a
system . He decides how much to bet on each play from the
pattern of previous events. Let
be the result
of the
n th play, where
is the
amount of the bet;
indicates a
bet on a head;
indicates a bet on a tail;
indicates a decision
not to bet.
Systems take various forms; here we consider two possibilities.
- The amount of the bet is determend by the pattern of outcomes of
previous tosses
- The amount bet is determined by the pattern of previous payoffs
Let
, a constant. Since
C is independent of any random variable,
. In either scheme, by
(CE8) ,
(CI5) , and the fact
It follows that
The “fairness” of the game is not altered by the betting scheme, since decisions
must be based on past performance. In spite of simple beginnings, the extension and analysis of these patterns form a
major thrust of modern probability theory.
In the following treatment,
-
is the
basic sequence
-
is the
incremental sequence
We suppose
Z
N is a
decision sequence and
; that is,
.
-
iff
- If
and
, then
. In particular, if
, then
.
Definition . If
X
N is integrable and
Z
N is a decision sequence, then
-
X
N is a
martingale (MG) relative to
Z
N iff
-
X
N is a
submartingale (SMG) relative to
Z
N iff
-
X
N is a
supermartingale (SRMG) relative to
Z
N iff