I have seen this line in a computation and I wonder if that makes sense : <mrow class="MJX-TeXAt

Janessa Olson

Janessa Olson

Answered question

2022-07-08

I have seen this line in a computation and I wonder if that makes sense : E ( X | Y ) = E ( X | Y = y ) d P ( Y = y ) where P is a probability measure, X , Y are random variables, so is E ( X | Y ). But I'm not familiar with this notation. If this is right, how can I understand it ?

Answer & Explanation

Kayley Jackson

Kayley Jackson

Beginner2022-07-09Added 16 answers

You have that E ( X | Y ) is, by definition, σ ( Y )-measurable, and it can be shown that there is a measurable function h : R R such that E ( X | Y ) = h ( Y ).
Clearly h ( Y ) d P d P, and so h ( y ) d P Y ( y ) d P Y ( y ), where d P Y is the measure induced by Y in R . Then we set E ( X | Y = y ) := h ( y ). However, your identity is false, according to the above we have that
R E ( X | Y = y ) d P Y ( y ) = Ω E ( X | Y ) d P = Ω X d P = E ( X )

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