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Antoine Lejay

Researcher at Institut Élie Cartan de Lorraine

Publications -  110
Citations -  2057

Antoine Lejay is an academic researcher from Institut Élie Cartan de Lorraine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monte Carlo method & Brownian motion. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 106 publications receiving 1807 citations. Previous affiliations of Antoine Lejay include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of Oxford.

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On the constructions of the skew Brownian motion

TL;DR: The authors summarizes the various ways one may use to construct the Skew Brownian motion, and shows their connections, and concludes with a brief account of related results, extensions and applications.
Book ChapterDOI

An Introduction to Rough Paths

Antoine Lejay
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the theory of rough paths, in which integrals of differential forms against irregular paths and differential equations controlled by irregular paths are defined, making use of an extension of the notion of iterated integrals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Young integrals and SPDEs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the non-linear evolution problem dY_t = -A Y_t dt + B(Yt) dX_t, where X is a \gamma-Holder continuous function of the time parameter, with values in a distribution space, and -A the generator of an analytical semigroup.
Posted Content

Young integrals and SPDEs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the non-linear evolution problem of a continuous function of the time parameter, with values in a distribution space, and the generator of an analytical semigroup.
Journal ArticleDOI

A scheme for simulating one-dimensional diffusion processes with discontinuous coefficients

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a scheme for simulating diffusion processes evolving in one-dimensional discontinuous media, which does not rely on smoothing the coefficients that appear in the infinitesimal generator of the diffusion processes, but uses instead an exact description of the behavior of their trajectories when they reach the points of discontinuity.