Algebra of random variables

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Algebra of random variables is the algebraic axiomatization of random variables.



References

2016

  1. complex constants are random variables;
  2. the sum of two random variables is a random variable;
  3. the product of two random variables is a random variable;
  4. addition and multiplication of random variables are both commutative; and
  5. there is a notion of conjugation of random variables, satisfying (ab)* = b*a* and a** = a for all random variables a,b and coinciding with complex conjugation if a is a constant.

    This means that random variables form complex commutative *-algebras. If a = a* then the random variable a is called "real".

    An expectation E on an algebra A of random variables is a normalized, positive linear functional. What this means is that

  • E(k) = k where k is a constant;
  • E(a*a) ≥ 0 for all random variables a;
  • E(a + b) = E(a) + E(b) for all random variables a and b; and
  • E(za) = zE(a) if z is a constant.
One may generalize this setup, allowing the algebra to be noncommutative. This leads to other areas of noncommutative probability such as quantum probability, random matrix theory, and free probability.