In mathematics, the Milstein method is a technique for the approximate numerical solution of a stochastic differential equation. It is named after Grigori N. Milstein who first published it in 1974.[1][2]

Description edit

Consider the autonomous Itō stochastic differential equation:

 
with initial condition  , where   stands for the Wiener process, and suppose that we wish to solve this SDE on some interval of time  . Then the Milstein approximation to the true solution   is the Markov chain   defined as follows:
  • partition the interval   into   equal subintervals of width  :
     
  • set  
  • recursively define   for   by:
     
    where   denotes the derivative of   with respect to   and:
     
    are independent and identically distributed normal random variables with expected value zero and variance  . Then   will approximate   for  , and increasing   will yield a better approximation.

Note that when  , i.e. the diffusion term does not depend on  , this method is equivalent to the Euler–Maruyama method.

The Milstein scheme has both weak and strong order of convergence,  , which is superior to the Euler–Maruyama method, which in turn has the same weak order of convergence,  , but inferior strong order of convergence,  .[3]

Intuitive derivation edit

For this derivation, we will only look at geometric Brownian motion (GBM), the stochastic differential equation of which is given by:

 
with real constants   and  . Using Itō's lemma we get:
 

Thus, the solution to the GBM SDE is:

 
where
 

See numerical solution is presented above for three different trajectories.[4]

 
Numerical solution for the stochastic differential equation just presented, the drift is twice the diffusion coefficient.

Computer implementation edit

The following Python code implements the Milstein method and uses it to solve the SDE describing the Geometric Brownian Motion defined by

 
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Milstein Method

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt


class Model:
    """Stochastic model constants."""
    μ = 3
    σ = 1


def dW(Δt):
    """Random sample normal distribution."""
    return np.random.normal(loc=0.0, scale=np.sqrt(Δt))


def run_simulation():
    """ Return the result of one full simulation."""
    # One second and thousand grid points
    T_INIT = 0
    T_END = 1
    N = 1000 # Compute 1000 grid points
    DT = float(T_END - T_INIT) / N
    TS = np.arange(T_INIT, T_END + DT, DT)

    Y_INIT = 1

    # Vectors to fill
    ys = np.zeros(N + 1)
    ys[0] = Y_INIT
    for i in range(1, TS.size):
        t = (i - 1) * DT
        y = ys[i - 1]
        dw = dW(DT)

        # Sum up terms as in the Milstein method
        ys[i] = y + \
            Model.μ * y * DT + \
            Model.σ * y * dw + \
            (Model.σ**2 / 2) * y * (dw**2 - DT)

    return TS, ys


def plot_simulations(num_sims: int):
    """Plot several simulations in one image."""
    for _ in range(num_sims):
        plt.plot(*run_simulation())

    plt.xlabel("time (s)")
    plt.ylabel("y")
    plt.grid()
    plt.show()


if __name__ == "__main__":
    NUM_SIMS = 2
    plot_simulations(NUM_SIMS)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mil'shtein, G. N. (1974). "Approximate integration of stochastic differential equations". Teoriya Veroyatnostei i ee Primeneniya (in Russian). 19 (3): 583–588.
  2. ^ Mil’shtein, G. N. (1975). "Approximate Integration of Stochastic Differential Equations". Theory of Probability & Its Applications. 19 (3): 557–000. doi:10.1137/1119062.
  3. ^ V. Mackevičius, Introduction to Stochastic Analysis, Wiley 2011
  4. ^ Umberto Picchini, SDE Toolbox: simulation and estimation of stochastic differential equations with Matlab. http://sdetoolbox.sourceforge.net/

Further reading edit

  • Kloeden, P.E., & Platen, E. (1999). Numerical Solution of Stochastic Differential Equations. Springer, Berlin. ISBN 3-540-54062-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)