Matrix analytic method
In probability theory, the matrix analytic method is a technique to compute the stationary probability distribution of an M/G/1 type model.[1][2] The method is a more complicated version of the matrix geometric solution method. It is the classical solution method for M/G/1 chains.[3]
Method description
An M/G/1-type stochastic matrix is one of the form[1]
where Bi and Ai are k × k matrices. (Note that unmarked matrix entries represent zeroes.) If P is irreducible and positive recurrent then the stationary distribution is given by the solution to the equations[1]
where e represents a vector of suitable dimension with all values equal to 1. Matching the structure of P, π is partitioned to π1, π2, π3, …. To compute these probabilities the column stochastic matrix G is computed such that[1]
and matrices are defined[1]
then π0 is found by solving[1]
and the πi are given by Ramaswami's formula,[1] a numerically stable relationship first published by Vaidyanathan Ramaswami in 1988.[4]
Computation of G
There are two popular iterative methods for computing G,[5][6]
- functional iterations
- cyclic reduction.
References
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