Gaussian concentration, integral probability metrics, and coupling functionals for infinite lattice systems
Abstract
We develop a transport-entropy framework for Gaussian concentration inequalities on the infinite product space S Zd, where S is a finite set, in which sensitivity is measured by the 2-norm of local oscillations. We show that the associated transportation costs cannot be induced by any metric or cost function on the configuration space, due to a structural lack of extensivity in infinite product spaces. Our main result proves that the associated integral probability metric and coupling functional coincide in finite volume, yielding a duality extending the classical Kantorovich-Rubinstein theorem beyond the metric setting. As a consequence, Marton's coupling inequality in all finite volumes is equivalent to Gaussian concentration, yielding a new characterization in the infinite-product setting. In the translation-invariant setting, the corresponding metrics converge in the thermodynamic limit to the d-metric. We further introduce a thermodynamic Gaussian concentration bound and prove its equivalence with a transport-entropy inequality involving the relative entropy density.
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