Birth–death process

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The birth–death process (or birth-and-death process) is a special case of continuous-time Markov process where the state transitions are of only two types: "births", which increase the state variable by one and "deaths", which decrease the state by one. It was introduced by William Feller.[1] The model's name comes from a common application, the use of such models to represent the current size of a population where the transitions are literal births and deaths. Birth–death processes have many applications in demography, queueing theory, performance engineering, epidemiology, biology and other areas. They may be used, for example, to study the evolution of bacteria, the number of people with a disease within a population, or the number of customers in line at the supermarket.

Definition

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When a birth occurs, the process goes from state n to n + 1. When a death occurs, the process goes from state n to state n − 1. The process is specified by positive birth rates   and positive death rates  . The number of individuals in the process at time   is denoted by  . The process has the Markov property and   describes how   changes through time. For small  , the function   is assumed to satisfy the following properties:

 
 
 

This process is represented by the following figure with the states of the process (i.e. the number of individuals in the population) depicted by the circles, and transitions between states indicated by the arrows.

 

Recurrence and transience

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For recurrence and transience in Markov processes see Section 5.3 from Markov chain.

Conditions for recurrence and transience

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Conditions for recurrence and transience were established by Samuel Karlin and James McGregor.[2]

A birth-and-death process is recurrent if and only if
 
A birth-and-death process is ergodic if and only if
 
A birth-and-death process is null-recurrent if and only if
 

By using Extended Bertrand's test (see Section 4.1.4 from Ratio test) the conditions for recurrence, transience, ergodicity and null-recurrence can be derived in a more explicit form.[3]

For integer   let   denote the  th iterate of natural logarithm, i.e.   and for any  ,  .

Then, the conditions for recurrence and transience of a birth-and-death process are as follows.

The birth-and-death process is transient if there exist     and   such that for all  
 

where the empty sum for   is assumed to be 0.

The birth-and-death process is recurrent if there exist   and   such that for all  
 

Wider classes of birth-and-death processes, for which the conditions for recurrence and transience can be established, can be found in.[4]

Application

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Consider one-dimensional random walk   that is defined as follows. Let  , and   where   takes values  , and the distribution of   is defined by the following conditions:

 

where   satisfy the condition  .

The random walk described here is a discrete time analogue of the birth-and-death process (see Markov chain) with the birth rates

 

and the death rates

 .

So, recurrence or transience of the random walk is associated with recurrence or transience of the birth-and-death process.[3]

The random walk is transient if there exist  ,   and   such that for all  
 

where the empty sum for   is assumed to be zero.

The random walk is recurrent if there exist   and   such that for all  
 

Stationary solution

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If a birth-and-death process is ergodic, then there exists steady-state probabilities   where   is the probability that the birth-and-death process is in state   at time   The limit exists, independent of the initial values   and is calculated by the relations:

 
 

These limiting probabilities are obtained from the infinite system of differential equations for  

 
 

and the initial condition  

In turn, the last system of differential equations is derived from the system of difference equations that describes the dynamic of the system in a small time  . During this small time   only three types of transitions are considered as one death, or one birth, or no birth nor death. The probability of the first two of these transitions has the order of  . Other transitions during this small interval   such as more than one birth, or more than one death, or at least one birth and at least one death have the probabilities that are of smaller order than  , and hence are negligible in derivations. If the system is in state k, then the probability of birth during an interval   is  , the probability of death is  , and the probability of no birth and no death is  . For a population process, "birth" is the transition towards increasing the population size by 1 while "death" is the transition towards decreasing the population size by 1.

Examples of birth-death processes

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A pure birth process is a birth–death process where   for all  .

A pure death process is a birth–death process where   for all  .

M/M/1 model and M/M/c model, both used in queueing theory, are birth–death processes used to describe customers in an infinite queue.

Use in phylodynamics

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Birth–death processes are used in phylodynamics as a prior distribution for phylogenies, i.e. a binary tree in which birth events correspond to branches of the tree and death events correspond to leaf nodes.[5] Notably, they are used in viral phylodynamics[6] to understand the transmission process and how the number of people infected changes through time.[7]

The use of generalized birth-death processes in phylodynamics has stimulated investigations into the degree to which the rates of birth and death can be identified from data.[8] While the model is unidentifiable in general, the subset of models that are typically used are identifiable.[9]

Use in queueing theory

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In queueing theory the birth–death process is the most fundamental example of a queueing model, the M/M/C/K/ /FIFO (in complete Kendall's notation) queue. This is a queue with Poisson arrivals, drawn from an infinite population, and C servers with exponentially distributed service times with K places in the queue. Despite the assumption of an infinite population this model is a good model for various telecommunication systems.

M/M/1 queue

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The M/M/1 is a single server queue with an infinite buffer size. In a non-random environment the birth–death process in queueing models tend to be long-term averages, so the average rate of arrival is given as   and the average service time as  . The birth and death process is an M/M/1 queue when,

 

The differential equations for the probability that the system is in state k at time t are

 
 

Pure birth process associated with an M/M/1 queue

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Pure birth process with   is a particular case of the M/M/1 queueing process. We have the following system of differential equations:

 
 

Under the initial condition   and  , the solution of the system is

 

That is, a (homogeneous) Poisson process is a pure birth process.

M/M/c queue

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The M/M/C is a multi-server queue with C servers and an infinite buffer. It characterizes by the following birth and death parameters:

 

and

 

with

 

The system of differential equations in this case has the form:

 
 
 

Pure death process associated with an M/M/C queue

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Pure death process with   is a particular case of the M/M/C queueing process. We have the following system of differential equations:

 
 

Under the initial condition   and   we obtain the solution

 

that presents the version of binomial distribution depending on time parameter   (see Binomial process).

M/M/1/K queue

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The M/M/1/K queue is a single server queue with a buffer of size K. This queue has applications in telecommunications, as well as in biology when a population has a capacity limit. In telecommunication we again use the parameters from the M/M/1 queue with,

 
 
 

In biology, particularly the growth of bacteria, when the population is zero there is no ability to grow so,

 

Additionally if the capacity represents a limit where the individual dies from over population,

 

The differential equations for the probability that the system is in state k at time t are

 
 
 
 

Equilibrium

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A queue is said to be in equilibrium if the steady state probabilities   exist. The condition for the existence of these steady-state probabilities in the case of M/M/1 queue is   and in the case of M/M/C queue is  . The parameter   is usually called load parameter or utilization parameter. Sometimes it is also called traffic intensity.

Using the M/M/1 queue as an example, the steady state equations are

 
 

This can be reduced to

 

So, taking into account that  , we obtain

 

Bilateral birth-and-death process

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Bilateral birth-and-death process is defined similarly to that standard one with the only difference that the birth and death rates   and   are defined for the values of index parameter  .[10] Following this, a bilateral birth-and-death process is recurrent if and only if

 

The notions of ergodicity and null-recurrence are defined similarly by extending the corresponding notions of the standard birth-and-death process.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Feller, William (1939). "Die Grundlagen der Volterraschen Theorie des Kampfes ums Dasein in wahrscheinlichkeitstheoretischer Behandlung". Acta Biotheoretica. 5 (1): 11–40. doi:10.1007/BF01602932.
  2. ^ Karlin, Samuel; McGregor, James (1957). "The classification of birth and death processes" (PDF). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 86 (2): 366–400. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1957-0094854-8.
  3. ^ a b Abramov, Vyacheslav M. (2020). "Extension of the Bertrand–De Morgan test and its application". The American Mathematical Monthly. 127 (5): 444–448. arXiv:1901.05843. doi:10.1080/00029890.2020.1722551. S2CID 199552015.
  4. ^ Abramov, Vyacheslav M. (2022). "Necessary and sufficient conditions for the convergence of positive series" (PDF). Journal of Classical Analysis. 19 (2): 117–125. arXiv:2104.01702. doi:10.7153/jca-2022-19-09. S2CID 233025219.
  5. ^ Stadler T (December 2010). "Sampling-through-time in birth-death trees". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 267 (3): 396–404. Bibcode:2010JThBi.267..396S. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.09.010. PMID 20851708.
  6. ^ Kühnert D, Wu CH, Drummond AJ (December 2011). "Phylogenetic and epidemic modeling of rapidly evolving infectious diseases". Infection, Genetics and Evolution. 11 (8): 1825–41. doi:10.1016/j.meegid.2011.08.005. PMC 7106223. PMID 21906695.
  7. ^ Zarebski AE, du Plessis L, Parag KV, Pybus OG (February 2022). "A computationally tractable birth-death model that combines phylogenetic and epidemiological data". PLOS Computational Biology. 18 (2): e1009805. Bibcode:2022PLSCB..18E9805Z. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009805. PMC 8903285. PMID 35148311.
  8. ^ Louca S, Pennell MW (April 2020). "Extant timetrees are consistent with a myriad of diversification histories" (PDF). Nature. 508 (7804): 502–505. Bibcode:2020Natur.580..502L. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-2176-1. PMID 32322065. S2CID 215775763.
  9. ^ Legried B, Terhorst (August 2022). "A class of identifiable phylogenetic birth–death models". PNAS. 119 (35): e2119513119. Bibcode:2022PNAS..11919513L. doi:10.1073/pnas.2119513119. PMC 9436344. PMID 35994663.
  10. ^ Pruitt, William E. (1963). "Bilateral birth and death processes" (PDF). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 107 (3): 508–525. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1963-0150858-0.

References

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  • Latouche, G.; Ramaswami, V. (1999). "Quasi-Birth-and-Death Processes". Introduction to Matrix Analytic Methods in Stochastic Modelling (1st ed.). ASA SIAM. ISBN 0-89871-425-7.
  • Nowak, M. A. (2006). Evolutionary Dynamics: Exploring the Equations of Life. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-02338-2.
  • Virtamo, J. "Birth-death processes" (PDF). 38.3143 Queueing Theory. Retrieved 2 December 2019.