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Foundations of Multistage Stochastic Programming

Multistage stochastic optimization problems are oftentimes formulated informally in a pathwise way. These are correct in a discrete setting and suitable when addressing computational challenges, for example. But the pathwise problem statement does not allow an analysis with mathematical rigor and is therefore not appropriate. This paper addresses the foundations. We provide a novel formulation of multistage stochastic optimization problems by involving adequate stochastic processes as control. The fundamental contribution is a proof that there exist measurable versions of intermediate value functions. Our proof builds on the Kolmogorov continuity theorem. A verification theorem is given in addition, and it is demonstrated that all traditional problem specifications can be stated in the novel setting with mathematical rigor. Further, we provide dynamic equations for the general problem, which is developed for various problem classes. The problem classes covered here include Markov decision processes, reinforcement learning and stochastic dual dynamic programming.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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