When the bispectrum is real-valued
Let {X(t),t∈Z} be a stationary time series with a.e. positive spectrum. Two consequences of that the bispectrum of {X(t),t∈Z} is real-valued but nonzero are: (1) if {X(t),t∈Z} is also linear, then it is reversible; (2) {X(t),t∈Z} cannot be causal linear. A corollary of the first statement: if {X(t),t∈Z} is linear, and the skewness of X(0) is nonzero, then third order reversibility implies reversibility. In this paper the notion of bispectrum is of a broader scope since we do not assume the absolute summability of the third order cumulants.
| Year of publication: |
2014
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Iglói, E. ; Terdik, Gy. |
| Published in: |
Statistics & Probability Letters. - Elsevier, ISSN 0167-7152. - Vol. 95.2014, C, p. 1-5
|
| Publisher: |
Elsevier |
| Subject: | Bispectrum | Cumulant | Nonlinearity | Causality | Reversibility |
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