For the class of Ito-type nonlinear Stochastic Differential Equations (SDE), where the drift and the diffusion are σπ-functions (σπ-SDE), we prove that the (infinite) set of all moments of the solution satisfies a system of infinite ordinary differential equations (ODEs), which is always linear. The result is proven by showing first that a σπ-SDE can be cubified, i.e. reduced to a system of SDE of larger (but still finite) dimension in general, where drifts and diffusions are at most third-degree polynomial functions. Our motivation for deriving a moment equation in closed form comes from systems biology, where second-order moments are exploited to quantify the stochastic variability around the steady-state average amount of the molecular players involved in a bio-chemical reaction framework. Indeed, the proposed methodology allows to write the moment equations in the presence of non-polynomial nonlinarities, when exploiting the Chemical Langevin Equations (which are SDE) as a model abstraction. An example is given, associated to a protein-gene production model, where non-polynomial nonlinearities are known to occur.
Borri, A., Carravetta, F., Palumbo, P. (2016). Cubification of nonlinear stochastic differential equations and approximate moments calculation of the Langevin Equation. In 55th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, Las Vegas, December 12-14, 2016 (pp.4540-4545). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. [10.1109/CDC.2016.7798960].
Cubification of nonlinear stochastic differential equations and approximate moments calculation of the Langevin Equation
Palumbo, P
2016
Abstract
For the class of Ito-type nonlinear Stochastic Differential Equations (SDE), where the drift and the diffusion are σπ-functions (σπ-SDE), we prove that the (infinite) set of all moments of the solution satisfies a system of infinite ordinary differential equations (ODEs), which is always linear. The result is proven by showing first that a σπ-SDE can be cubified, i.e. reduced to a system of SDE of larger (but still finite) dimension in general, where drifts and diffusions are at most third-degree polynomial functions. Our motivation for deriving a moment equation in closed form comes from systems biology, where second-order moments are exploited to quantify the stochastic variability around the steady-state average amount of the molecular players involved in a bio-chemical reaction framework. Indeed, the proposed methodology allows to write the moment equations in the presence of non-polynomial nonlinarities, when exploiting the Chemical Langevin Equations (which are SDE) as a model abstraction. An example is given, associated to a protein-gene production model, where non-polynomial nonlinearities are known to occur.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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