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category with duals (list of them)
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monoidal dagger-category?
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In higher category theory
One of the main tenets of probability theory is that in general the probability of the product is not the product of the probabilities, because of correlation and other statistical interactions. In particular, the probability of an infinite product is not the infinite product of the probabilities.
However, an infinite product is a cofiltered limit of finite products, and under some conditions, the probability of an infinite product is the limit of the probability of the finite products. One can interpret this fact as the absence of “infinitary correlations”.
Statements of this kind are known collectively as the Kolmogorov extension theorem. They are particularly important in the theory of stochastic processes, since a stochastic process can be seen as a joint distribution over an infinite product.
In terms of category theory, this can be phrased as the fact that this cofiltered limit is preserved by the left adjoint from measurable spaces to Markov kernels (or equivalently, by the Giry monad).
We look at the classical statement, and then give two (related) ways to express it category-theoretically.
The classical statement is about probability measures, and roughly says that under some conditions, a probability measure on an infinite product is uniquely determined by its finite marginals.
Let be a collection of standard Borel spaces, indexed by a set of arbitrary cardinality.
There is a bijection between
and
In particular, the can be obtained as marginal distributions of the measure .
Note that
The same result holds more in general if each is a Hausdorff space equipped with its Borel sigma-algebra, and the measures are inner regular?.
The uncountable product of standard Borel spaces may fail to be standard Borel.
The Borel sigma-algebra of an uncountable product of topological spaces is not the product of the Borel sigma-algebras of the factors.
We can restate Kolmogorov’s extension theorem as a limit, as follows.
Let be a collection of standard Borel spaces, indexed by a set of arbitrary cardinality.
Note that, since infinite products are cofiltered limits of finite products, is the limit in Meas of the diagram formed by the and their projections.
Now:
The object is the limit of the also in the category Stoch of measurable spaces and Markov kernels.
Note that this does not say that is the product of the (that would be false even in the finite case). It is just the “finite to infinite” part which is retained in the category of kernels.
For finite sets , denote by and the product projections. With a slight abuse, denote the Markov kernel induced by the functions and again by and .
Given a measurable space , we have to show that there is a bijection between Markov kernels and families of Markov kernels such that for each inclusion , the outer triangle in the following diagram of Stoch commutes.
Now for each , the Markov kernels and are just probability measures, so that Theorem applies. We only need to show that is measurable in if and only if the are. Now if is measurable, so is , since the composition of measurable functions is measurable. The converse is true as well, since measurability of Markov kernels can be equivalently tested on a pi-system?.
The result in terms of Markov kernels can be restated in terms of the Giry monad as follows.
Once again, recall that is the cofiltered limit in Meas of the diagram formed by the and their projections.
Now, if the are standard Borel:
The Giry monad preserves this limit.
We have to show that given a measurable space , there is a bijection between measurable functions and families of measurable functions such that for each inclusion , the outer triangle in the following diagram of Meas commutes. Now since Stoch is the Kleisli category of the Giry monad, notice that there is a bijection
natural in , so that the universal property that we want to prove is just a restatement of the proof of Corollary .
In Markov categories the Kolmogorov extension theorem appears in the form of an axiom that the category can satisfy, an abstraction of the universal property in the category of Markov kernels given above.
Let be a Markov category, and let be a family of objects. A Kolmogorov product of them is an infinite tensor product
such that all finite projections (marginalizations) , with finite, are deterministic morphisms.
The category BorelStoch, for example, has all countable Kolmogorov products. (The uncountable product of standard Borel spaces, in general, is not standard Borel.)
See Markov category - Kolmogorov products for more on this, as well as Fritz-Rischel’20.
Tobias Fritz and Eigil Fjeldgren Rischel, Infinite products and zero-one laws in categorical probability, Compositionality 2(3) 2020. (arXiv:1912.02769)
Ruben Van Belle, A categorical treatment of the Radon-Nikodym theorem and martingales, 2023. (arXiv)
Last revised on July 28, 2024 at 18:04:22. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.