Ogawa integral explained

In stochastic calculus, the Ogawa integral, also called the non-causal stochastic integral, is a stochastic integral for non-adapted processes as integrands. The corresponding calculus is called non-causal calculus in order to distinguish it from the anticipating calculus of the Skorokhod integral. The term causality refers to the adaptation to the natural filtration of the integrator.

The integral was introduced by the Japanese mathematician Shigeyoshi Ogawa in 1979.[1]

Ogawa integral

Let

(\Omega,l{F},P)

be a probability space,

W=(Wt)t\in[0,T]

be a one-dimensional standard Wiener process with

T\inR+

,
W=\sigma(W
l{F}
s;0\leq

s\leqt)\subsetl{F}

and
W,
F
t

t\geq0\}

be the natural filtration of the Wiener process,

l{B}([0,T])

the Borel σ-algebra,

\intfdWt

be the Wiener integral,

dt

be the Lebesgue measure.

Further let

H

be the set of real-valued processes

X\colon[0,T] x \Omega\toR

that are

l{B}([0,T]) x l{F}

-measurable and almost surely in

L2([0,T],dt)

, i.e.
T
P\left(\int
0

|X(t,\omega)|2dt<infty\right)=1.

Ogawa integral

Let

\{\varphin\}n\in

be a complete orthonormal basis of the Hilbert space

L2([0,T],dt)

.

A process

X\inH

is called

\varphi

-integrable if the random series
T
\int
0

Xtd\varphiWt:=\sum

infty
n=1
T
\left(\int
0

Xt\varphin(t)dt\right)

T\varphi
\int
n(t)

dWt

converges in probability and the corresponding sum is called the Ogawa integral with respect to the basis

\{\varphin\}

.

If

X

is

\varphi

-integrable for any complete orthonormal basis of

L2([0,T],dt)

and the corresponding integrals share the same value then

X

is called universal Ogawa integrable (or u-integrable).[2]

More generally, the Ogawa integral can be defined for any

L2(\Omega,P)

-process

Zt

(such as the fractional Brownian motion) as integrators
T
\int
0

Xtd\varphiZt:=\sum

infty
n=1
T
\left(\int
0

Xt\varphin(t)dt\right)

T\varphi
\int
n(t)

dZt

as long as the integrals
T\varphi
\int
n(t)

dZt

are well-defined.

Remarks

Regularity of the orthonormal basis

An important concept for the Ogawa integral is the regularity of an orthonormal basis. An orthonormal basis

\{\varphin\}n\in

is called regular if

\supn

T
\int
0

\left(

n
\sum
i=1

\varphii(t)\int

t
0

\varphii(s)ds\right)2dt<infty

holds.

The following results on regularity are known:

\varphi

-integrable if and only if

\{\varphin\}

is regular.

L2([0,1],dt)

.[3]

Further topics

Relationship to other integrals

X

be a continuous

FW

-adapted semimartingale that is universal Ogawa integrable with respect to the Wiener process, then the Stratonovich integral exist and coincides with the Ogawa integral.[5]

Literature

References

  1. Shigeyoshi . Ogawa . Sur le produit direct du bruit blanc par lui-même . C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris Sér. A . Gauthier-Villars . 288 . 359–362 . 1979.
  2. Shigeyoshi . Ogawa . 2007 . Noncausal stochastic calculus revisited – around the so-called Ogawa integral . Advances in Deterministic and Stochastic Analysis . 978-981-270-550-1 . 10.1142/9789812770493_0016 . 238.
  3. Pietro . Majer . Maria Elvira . Mancino . A counter-example concerning a condition of Ogawa integrability. Séminaire de probabilités de Strasbourg . 31 . 1997 . 198–206 . 26 June 2023.
  4. Shigeyoshi . Ogawa . BPE and a Noncausal Girsanov's Theorem . Sankhya A . 78 . 304–323 . 2016 . 2 . 10.1007/s13171-016-0087-x. 258705123 .
  5. David. Nualart. Moshe. Zakai. On the Relation Between the Stratonovich and Ogawa Integrals. The Annals of Probability. 17. 4. 1536–1540. 1989. 10.1214/aop/1176991172. 1808/17063. free.
  6. David . Nualart . Moshe . Zakai . Generalized stochastic integrals and the Malliavin calculus . Probability Theory and Related Fields . 73 . 2 . 255–280 . 1986. 10.1007/BF00339940. 120687698 . free .