Abstract:
This article is an essay, both expository and argumentative, on the
Galton–Watson process as a tool in the domain of branching processes. It is at
the same time the author's way of honoring two distinguished scientists in this
domain, both from the Russian Academy of Sciences, and congratulating them on
their special birthdays.
The thread of the article is the role which the Galton–Watson process had
played in the author's own research. We start with a discussion on a controlled
Galton–Watson process. Then we pass to random absorbing processes, and also
recall and discuss a problem in medicine. Further questions bring us, via the
Borel–Cantelli lemma, to $\varphi$-branching processes and extensions. To gain
more generality we then look at bisexual Galton–Watson processes. Finally, we
briefly discuss relatively complicated resource-dependent branching processes to
show that, again, using Galton–Watson reproduction schemes (whenever
reasonable) can be a convincing approach to new processes, which are then
sufficiently tractable to obtain results of interest.
Keywords:
controlled branching process, $\varphi$-branching process, bisexual reproduction, Borel–Cantelli lemma, resource dependence, society forms, stopping times, theorem of envelopment, BRS-inequality.
Citation:
F. Thomas Bruss, “Galton–Watson processes and their role as building blocks for branching processes”, Teor. Veroyatnost. i Primenen., 67:1 (2022), 177–192; Theory Probab. Appl., 67:1 (2022), 141–153