Maximum Likelihood Estimation for Hawkes Processes with self-excitation or inhibition
Bonnet, Anna, Herrera, Miguel, Sangnier, Maxime
The Hawkes model is a point process observed on the real line, which generally corresponds to the time, where any previously encountered event has a direct influence on the chances of future events occurring. This past-dependent mathematical model was introduced in [1] and its first application was to model earthquakes occurrences [2, 3]. Since then, Hawkes processes have been widely used in various fields, for instance finance [4], social media [5, 6], epidemiology [7], sociology [8] and neuroscience [9]. The main advantage of Hawkes processes is their ability to model different kinds of relationships between phenomena through an unknown kernel or transfer function. The Hawkes model was originally introduced as a self-exciting point process where the appearance of an event increases the chances of another one triggering. Several estimation procedures have been proposed for the kernel function, both in parametric [2, 10, 11] and nonparametric [9, 12] frameworks. However, the inhibition setting, where the presence of an event decreases the chance of another occurring, has drawn less attention in the literature, although it can be of great interest in several fields, in particular in neuroscience [13]. In this inhibition context, the cluster representation [14] on which is based the construction of a self-exciting Hawkes process, is no longer valid.
Mar-9-2021