On intermediate levels of nested occupancy scheme in random environment generated by stick-breaking I
Abstract
Consider a weighted branching process generated by the lengths of intervals obtained by stick-breaking of unit length (a.k.a. the residual allocation model) and associate with each weight a `box'. Given the weights `balls' are thrown independently into the boxes of the first generation with probability of hitting a box being equal to its weight. Each ball located in a box of the jth generation, independently of the others, hits a daughter box in the (j+1)th generation with probability being equal the ratio of the daughter weight and the mother weight. This is what we call nested occupancy scheme in random environment. Restricting attention to a particular generation one obtains the classical Karlin occupancy scheme in random environment. Assuming that the stick-breaking factor has a uniform distribution on [0,1] and that the number of balls is n we investigate occupancy of intermediate generations, that is, those with indices jn u for u>0, where jn diverges to infinity at a sublogarithmic rate as n becomes large. Denote by Kn(j) the number of occupied (ever hit) boxes in the jth generation. It is shown that the finite-dimensional distributions of the process (Kn( jn u))u>0, properly normalized and centered, converge weakly to those of an integral functional of a Brownian motion. The case of a more general stick-breaking is also analyzed.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.