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Measurable events indexed by trees

A tree $T$ is said to be homogeneous if it is uniquely rooted and there exists an integer $b\geq 2$, called the branching number of $T$, such that every $t\in T$ has exactly $b$ immediate successors. We study the behavior of measurable events in probability spaces indexed by homogeneous trees. Precisely, we show that for every integer $b\geq 2$ and every integer $n\geq 1$ there exists an integer $q(b,n)$ with the following property. If $T$ is a homogeneous tree with branching number $b$ and $\{A_t:t\in T\}$ is a family of measurable events in a probability space $(Ω,Σ,μ)$ satisfying $μ(A_t)\geqε>0$ for every $t\in T$, then for every $0<θ<ε$ there exists a strong subtree $S$ of $T$ of infinite height such that for every non-empty finite subset $F$ of $S$ of cardinality $n$ we have \[ μ\Big(\bigcap_{t\in F} A_t\Big) \meg θ^{q(b,n)}. \] In fact, we can take $q(b,n)= \big((2^b-1)^{2n-1}-1\big)\cdot(2^b-2)^{-1}$. A finite version of this result is also obtained.

preprint2012arXivOpen access
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