Excited random walk.

Benjamini, Itai; Wilson, David B.

Electronic Communications in Probability [electronic only] (2003)

  • Volume: 8, page 86-92
  • ISSN: 1083-589X

How to cite

top

Benjamini, Itai, and Wilson, David B.. "Excited random walk.." Electronic Communications in Probability [electronic only] 8 (2003): 86-92. <http://eudml.org/doc/124512>.

@article{Benjamini2003,
author = {Benjamini, Itai, Wilson, David B.},
journal = {Electronic Communications in Probability [electronic only]},
keywords = {perturbed random walk; transience},
language = {eng},
pages = {86-92},
publisher = {University of Washington},
title = {Excited random walk.},
url = {http://eudml.org/doc/124512},
volume = {8},
year = {2003},
}

TY - JOUR
AU - Benjamini, Itai
AU - Wilson, David B.
TI - Excited random walk.
JO - Electronic Communications in Probability [electronic only]
PY - 2003
PB - University of Washington
VL - 8
SP - 86
EP - 92
LA - eng
KW - perturbed random walk; transience
UR - http://eudml.org/doc/124512
ER -

Citations in EuDML Documents

top
  1. Ross G. Pinsky, Transience/recurrence and the speed of a one-dimensional random walk in a “have your cookie and eat it” environment
  2. Martin P. W. Zerner, On the speed of a planar random walk avoiding its past convex hull
  3. Mark Holmes, Excited against the tide: a random walk with competing drifts
  4. Elena Kosygina, Thomas Mountford, Limit laws of transient excited random walks on integers
  5. Elisabeth Bauernschubert, Perturbing transient random walk in a random environment with cookies of maximal strength

NotesEmbed ?

top

You must be logged in to post comments.

To embed these notes on your page include the following JavaScript code on your page where you want the notes to appear.

Only the controls for the widget will be shown in your chosen language. Notes will be shown in their authored language.

Tells the widget how many notes to show per page. You can cycle through additional notes using the next and previous controls.

    
                

Note: Best practice suggests putting the JavaScript code just before the closing </body> tag.