Journal of Applied Probability

Random bisection and evolutionary walks

Eric Bach
Source: J. Appl. Probab. Volume 38, Number 2 (2001), 582-596.

Abstract

As models for molecular evolution, immune response, and local search algorithms, various authors have used a stochastic process called the evolutionary walk, which goes as follows. Assign a random number to each vertex of the infinite N-ary tree, and start with a particle on the root. A step of the process consists of searching for a child with a higher number and moving the particle there; if no such child exists, the process stops. The average number of steps in this process is asymptotic, as N → ∞, to log N, a result first proved by Macken and Perelson. This paper relates the evolutionary walk to a process called random bisection, familiar from combinatorics and number theory, which can be thought of as a transformed Poisson process. We first give a thorough treatment of the exact walk length, computing its distribution, moments and moment generating function. Next we show that the walk length is asymptotically normally distributed. We also treat it as a mixture of Poisson random variables and compute the asymptotic distribution of the Poisson parameter. Finally, we show that in an evolutionary walk with uniform vertex numbers, the 'jumps', ordered by size, have the same asymptotic distribution as the normalized cycle lengths in a random permutation.

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Primary Subjects: 60K99
Secondary Subjects: 68T20, 92D15
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Links and Identifiers

Permanent link to this document: http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.jap/996986764
Digital Object Identifier: doi:10.1239/jap/996986764
Mathematical Reviews number (MathSciNet): MR1834762
Zentralblatt MATH identifier: 01659451


2012 © Applied Probability Trust

Journal of Applied Probability

Journal of Applied Probability