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3 votes
1 answer
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Moments of a random variable related to uniform distribution on sphere

Let $u$ be taken uniformly from the unit sphere $\mathbb S^{n-1}$ and $D$ be a diagonal matrix. I'd like to find a general formula for $$ \mathbb E[(u^\top D u)^m] $$ for $m=1,2,3, \dots$, in terms of ...
Pluviophile's user avatar
  • 1,608
4 votes
1 answer
261 views

What is the convergence rate of this "infinite monkey"-type probability?

Cross-posted from Math Stack Exchange, where it hasn’t received an answer yet: Let $S$ be a finite set and $n,m\in\mathbb N$. Consider the process $R=(R_i)_{i\in\mathbb N}$ where all $R_i$ are iid ...
Joseph Expo's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
55 views

Modeling player interactions in multi-dimensional rating systems

In traditional rating systems (such as Elo), a player's strength is represented by a single scalar value, which is assumed to be consistent across different opponents. However, in some games, the ...
mb1's user avatar
  • 1
1 vote
0 answers
91 views

Large deviation inequalities for number of coupon types collected by a coupon collector with fixed budget

In the generalized Coupon Collector's Problem, there are $N$ types of coupon, and for any $i \in [N] := \{1,2,\ldots,N\}$, $p_i \ge 0$ is the probability of obtaining a type-i coupon on any trial. ...
dohmatob's user avatar
  • 6,853
4 votes
1 answer
197 views

On a double sum involving binomial coefficients

For natural $n$, let \begin{equation} p_n:=2^{1-n}\sum_{v=1}^l \binom l{(v+l)/2}1(v\equiv l) \sum_{u=1-v}^{v-1}\binom k{(u+k)/2}1(u\equiv k), \tag{1}\label{1} \end{equation} where $k:=\lfloor(n+1)/...
Iosif Pinelis's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
1k views

The length of the longest consecutive string of heads or tails that occur asymptotically almost surely when a unbiased coin is flipped repeatedly

Consider an unbiased coin being flipped $n$ times, and suppose we label the outcomes as Heads = 0, and Tails = 1. Then the result of the flipping is a finite binary sequence of length $n$. Let us ...
positron's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
229 views

Maximum cardinality of separated sets in the Hamming distance

This question is motivated by section 15.1 (Codes) of Alon and Spencer's The probabilistic method. Fix $\alpha<\frac{1}{2}$ and for each $n\in\mathbb{N}$ let $\{0,1\}^n$ be the length $n$ binary ...
Saúl RM's user avatar
  • 10.6k
3 votes
1 answer
266 views

A linearly distributed version of the balls into bins problem

Some years ago, I found a paper with all the formulas for the balls into bins problem when the "areas" (i.e., probabilities to capture a ball) of the bins are all different. However, the ...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
186 views

$d$-ball approximation for $d\gg 1$ with a convex hull of random points on its boundary

Given a $d$-ball $\mathcal{S}^{d}$, let $P_n$ a set of $n$ points selected uniformly at random on the boundary $\mathcal{S}^{d-1}$ of $\mathcal{S}^{d}$. Let $\mathcal{C}_n$ the convex hull of $P_n$. ...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
199 views

Do enough permutations of an initial set probably cover most permutations?

Fix $\alpha, \epsilon \in(0,1)$. Take $(S_n)_n$ to be any sequence of sets with each $S_n$ containing $ \lceil (n!)^\alpha\rceil$ permutations of $n$ elements. Also build another sequence of sets $(...
Christian Chapman's user avatar
8 votes
0 answers
181 views

Self-avoiding walks on strips

A strip is a locally finite graph which admits a quasi-transitive (i.e. finitley many orbits on vertices) action of $\mathbb Z$. A self avoiding walk is a walk which visits no vertex more than once. ...
Florian Lehner's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
229 views

Inequality for difference of consecutive atom probabilities for binomial distribution

Edit: This post was originally two questions, the first of which has been answered, but a reference would still be appreciated if existent. The second question has been removed and migrated to its ...
Pat Devlin's user avatar
  • 2,720
1 vote
2 answers
50 views

Cyclic inequality for 2 dimensional simplex elements

Let $p=(p_{1},p_{2},p_{3})\in\Delta$, with $\Delta:=\lbrace p\in(0,1)^{3}\ |\ p_{1}+p_{2}+p_{3}=1 \rbrace$. I aim to prove (not knowing whether it is true though) that \begin{equation} p_{1}^{p_{3}-p_{...
Tobsn's user avatar
  • 289
1 vote
2 answers
203 views

Moments of a combinatorial ensemble of random variables

Suppose $X_1,\dots,X_n$ are jointly distributed random variables such that the random $n$-tuple $(X_1,\dots,X_n)$ is uniformly distributed on the set of $n$-tuples of nonnegative integers summing to $...
James Propp's user avatar
  • 19.7k
3 votes
1 answer
341 views

Spectral radius of Markov averaging operator on graphs

The definition of Markov operator which I am familiar with: For a graph $G=(V,E)$, Markov's operator upon a function $\varphi:V\rightarrow\mathbb{C}$ , $\varphi\in L^2(G,\nu)$ ($\nu(v):=\deg(v)$) ...
user140823's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
116 views

How to use probability to find a matching in a family of graphs?

In a conference, I heard that we can use some probabilistic methods to find a matching in some kind of graphs. I would like to see some examples of such technics. Can someone provide some references ...
Henry Zagreb's user avatar
7 votes
0 answers
171 views

What is known about the distribution of lengths of the cycle you get by adding an edge to a uniform spanning tree?

Let $G$ be a finite, connected graph. Let $T$ be a uniform spanning tree, and let $e$ be a uniformly random edge not in $T$. When we add $e$ to $T$, we get a subgraph with a unique cycle, $C$. I am ...
Elle Najt's user avatar
  • 1,462
5 votes
1 answer
281 views

Transfer-impedance matrix for edge correlations in random spanning tree

Suppose $G$ is a (weighted) connected graph and let $T$ denote a random spanning tree of $G$, chosen uniformly (or respecting the edge weights). It is known that for any distinct edges $e, f$ $$\...
Harry Richman's user avatar
7 votes
3 answers
790 views

Expected cardinality of a randomly chosen element of the family of subsets of $\{1,\ldots,n\}$ with at most $k$-elements

Assume that $1\le k \le n$ and let $\mathscr{Z}$ be the family of all subsets of $\{1,\ldots,n\}$ with at most $k$ elements. Pick a random element $X$ of $\mathscr{Z}$ (we consider the probablity ...
Dominik Kwietniak's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
105 views

Long loops in critical random graphs

A simple calculation seems to show that the expected number $X_k$ of loops of length $k$ in a critical Erdös-Renyi random graph $G(n,n^{-1})$ is approximately given by $$ \mathbb{E} X_k=\frac1{2k}{e^...
Johannes Kleinholz's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
91 views

Semigroups of nondecreasing functions

Consider some partially ordered set $(E,\leq)$. Assume either that it is countable with the discrete topology, or that it has some topology compatible with the order, preferably one that makes it into ...
Vilhelm Agdur's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
883 views

The dance marathon problem

In his book, "The Strange Logic of Random Graphs", Joel Spencer describes the "Dance Marathon" problem: Imagine $n$ couples at a Dance Marathon. Each dance each couple remains ...
Bill Bradley's user avatar
  • 3,979
4 votes
0 answers
188 views

Distributions over permutation groups $\mathcal{S}_n$

Partly inspired by recent developments in enumeration of pattern avoiding permutations, which is known to be connected with Brownian excursions [Hoffman&Rizzolo]. The exciting milestone is the ...
Henry.L's user avatar
  • 8,071
7 votes
2 answers
3k views

The largest Wasserstein distance to uniform distribution among all probability distributions with uniform marginals

I am looking for the largest Wasserstein distance to the uniform distribution among all probability distributions with uniform marginals. More specifically, let $\Xi=\{1,2,\ldots,N\}^2$, and let $\nu$...
O. Richard's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
878 views

Is there a combinatorial/topological treatment of statistical independence?

Is there any reference which studies sets of random variables as independence systems, a type of combinatorial object (see below)? Motivation: In particular, since independence systems are abstract ...
Chill2Macht's user avatar
  • 2,680
8 votes
2 answers
512 views

The average of reciprocal binomials

This question is motivated by the MO problem here. Perhaps it is not that difficult. Question. Here is an cute formula. $$\frac1n\sum_{k=0}^{n-1}\frac1{\binom{n-1}k}=\sum_{k=1}^n\frac1{k2^{n-k}}...
T. Amdeberhan's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
303 views

Exchangeable or iid random variables and linear conditioning

Let $X_1,\ldots ,X_N$ be independent identically distributed random variables (or, more generally, exchangeable random variables, but let's assume independence for simplicity). Then $$ E(X_i\mid X_1+\...
Leonid Petrov's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
177 views

Representations of zero as the sum of integers

Considering certain random walks I came up with the following question: Given a finite set $A$ containing positive and negative integers, how many representations of zero as the sum of $n$ integers ...
Jörg Neunhäuserer's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
95 views

Reference for a local density theorem for binary vectors

I have the following theorem written on my whiteboard, but have misplaced the reference. I believe the probabilistic method may be involved in the proof. Any pointers appreciated. Theorem Let $v\in\{...
kodlu's user avatar
  • 10.4k
3 votes
1 answer
1k views

Gradient of probability distribution

Given a random walk on a lattice $L$ (not necessarily centered - we allow $E[X_i] \neq 0$ for the i.i.d. increments $X_i$), let $p_t(x)$ denote the probability measure of state $x \in L$ after $t$ ...
Titus's user avatar
  • 153
11 votes
0 answers
282 views

Reference request: a combinatoric result [closed]

When I tried to construct a counterexample in my research, I encountered the following result, which should be true. Let $m=m(n)$ be a function that grows faster than $\sqrt n$, so $m(n) = \omega(\...
Zhu Cao's user avatar
  • 211
1 vote
0 answers
339 views

Occupancy problem with limited capacity and two types of balls [closed]

I am considering the following problem that I suspect to be standard. One has a set of $N$ balls composed of a fraction $\alpha$ of red balls and $(1-\alpha)$ of black balls (we assume $\alpha N$ is ...
user66945's user avatar
16 votes
3 answers
918 views

What is the minimal $C_k$, such that every $f\colon \{-1,1\}^n\to \mathbb{R}$ of degree at most $k$ satisfies $\|f\|_2\le C_k\|f\|_1$

Every $f\colon\{-1,1\}^n\to \mathbb{R}$ can be repsenented as a multilinean polynomial of the form $$f(x_1,x_2,\ldots ,x_n)=\sum _{S\subseteq [n]} \hat{f}(S)\prod_{i\in S} x_i $$ The degree of the ...
NoamL's user avatar
  • 311
19 votes
5 answers
18k views

Time-inhomogeneous Markov chains

I'm trying to find out what is known about time-inhomogeneous ergodic Markov Chains where the transition matrix can vary over time. All textbooks and lecture notes I could find initially introduce ...
markov-imitator's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
255 views

An extrasensory perception strategy :-)

I asked this question at MSE some months ago but I received only partial answers, so I put it here. The following sounds nice for me and I spent a good time during the investigation. But I am a ...
Alex Ravsky's user avatar
  • 5,409
5 votes
0 answers
215 views

Asymptotics of a Splitting Process

Consider $p(n)$ defined recursively by $p(1)=1$ and $\displaystyle p(n)=\frac{1}{(n-1)^n}\sum_{i=1}^{n-1}\left\{\sum_{j=i}^{n-1}(-1)^{j-i}{n \choose j}{j\choose i}(n-j)^j(n-j-1)^{n-j}\right\}p(i)$. ...
Wiley's user avatar
  • 667
9 votes
0 answers
1k views

Balls and bins -- concentration bounds pertaining to the minimal load bin

Consider the standard balls and bins process, where $m$ balls are thrown uniformly at random into $n$ bins. Previous work has been done on estimating the value of the maximum load (i.e., the number of ...
JoelO's user avatar
  • 201
9 votes
2 answers
441 views

From very many sets of fixed measure in a probability space, can we select many that have a positive intersection?

I assume the following Lemma is either well known or, more probably, a Corollary of a much stronger well known Theorem, and I would be grateful for a reference: For all $\delta\in (0,1)$ and all $\...
Jakob's user avatar
  • 894
3 votes
1 answer
253 views

Bounds for duplicate finding with limited independence

(This is a follow up to this previous question on math.stackexchange.com.) Assume a process that samples uniformly at random from the range $[1,\ldots,n]$. I am interested in the time to find a ...
Raphael's user avatar
  • 33
13 votes
3 answers
1k views

A property of unimodal sequences

It is well-known that $(-1)^j \sum_{i=0}^j (-1)^i\binom{n}{i} \geq 0$. This inequality can be used to prove Bonferroni's inequalities for example. Recently I noticed that a similar inequality applies ...
Jose A Rodriguez's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
151 views

Mean occurrences of letters in complete strings given by a Bernoulli scheme

Suppose one has an alphabet of $K$ letters, from which we draw sequentially letters; assume that the $n$-th letter occurs with a fixed probability $p_n$ independently of the others and of the previous ...
alezok's user avatar
  • 418
5 votes
0 answers
227 views

Number of times lead changes in a multi-candidate election (reference-request)

In a two candidate election where votes are distributed uniformly at random between the candidates, the probability that the lead changes when tallying the $i$-th vote is the same as the probability ...
Kev's user avatar
  • 51
9 votes
0 answers
778 views

Faa di Bruno and Free Probability?

It is possible to glean many combinatorial identities using Faa di Bruno’s formula for the coefficients of higher derivatives of a composite function. For many examples, see David Vella’s paper. The ...
Jon Bannon's user avatar
  • 7,057
15 votes
1 answer
1k views

Has the technique of "sprinkling" been used in studying random matrices?

In 1982, while studying the component sizes of random subgraphs of a hypercube, Ajtai, Komlós, and Szemerédi introduced a technique that came to be known as sprinkling. In this technique, the edges of ...
Louigi Addario-Berry's user avatar
13 votes
2 answers
3k views

The probabilistic method - reference to less challenging questions

I am teaching a course in combinatorics and large part of it is dedicated to the probabilistic method especially in the case of graphs. The course is an undergraduate level (almost none of the ...