Homotopy Theory of Probability Spaces I: Classical independence and homotopy Lie algebras
Jae-Suk Park

TL;DR
This paper introduces homotopy probability spaces, enriching algebraic probability with homotopy theory concepts, to provide a new framework for understanding classical independence and invariants of random variables.
Contribution
It develops the foundational principles of homotopy probability theory, connecting symmetries of expectation to homotopy invariants and generalizing classical algebraic probability spaces.
Findings
Reinterprets laws of random variables as homotopy invariants.
Establishes a homotopy algebra framework for classical probability.
Describes laws using affinely flat structures on moduli spaces.
Abstract
This is the first installment of a series of papers whose aim is to lay a foundation for homotopy probability theory by establishing its basic principles and practices. The notion of a homotopy probability space is an enrichment of the notion of an algebraic probability space with ideas from algebraic homotopy theory. This enrichment uses a characterization of the laws of random variables in a probability space in terms of symmetries of the expectation. The laws of random variables are reinterpreted as invariants of the homotopy types of infinity morphisms between certain homotopy algebras. The relevant category of homotopy algebras is determined by the appropriate notion of independence for the underlying probability theory. This theory will be both a natural generalization and an effective computational tool for the study of classical algebraic probability spaces, while keeping the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAlgebraic structures and combinatorial models · Advanced Topics in Algebra · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology
