On It\^o-Stratonovich formula for rough sheets
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 15:47 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Elementary Taylor expansions yield an Itô-Stratonovich formula for rough sheets with asymmetric Hölder regularity.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We propose a simplified setting for rough calculus in the plane which relies on elementary Taylor expansions in a more fundamental way. This simple trick streamlines the complexity of planar algebraic integration. We illustrate the methodology in a specialized Rough-Young framework by extending the classical planar change-of-variable formula to paths with asymmetric Hölder regularity γ1 > 1/3 and γ2 > 1/2. Relying on structured controlled path expansions we rigorously minimize the set of iterated integrals needed in the signature and express the resulting formula as the explicit limit of Riemann sums.
What carries the argument
Structured controlled path expansions that use elementary Taylor expansions to minimize the iterated integrals required for the planar change-of-variable formula.
If this is right
- The planar change-of-variable formula holds as the limit of Riemann sums when the driving paths satisfy γ1 > 1/3 and γ2 > 1/2.
- The set of iterated integrals that must be tracked is strictly smaller than the 36-element planar signature.
- Mixed differential terms arising in two dimensions are handled through the Taylor expansions alone.
- The construction stays inside the Rough-Young regime and produces an explicit Itô-Stratonovich correction term.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same Taylor-expansion device may reduce the combinatorial burden in other multi-parameter rough-path settings that possess direction-dependent regularity.
- Explicit computations involving rough sheets in applications could become feasible without first building an exhaustive signature object.
Load-bearing premise
Elementary Taylor expansions suffice to control all necessary iterated integrals without the full combinatorial planar signature in the asymmetric regularity regime.
What would settle it
A concrete pair of paths with the stated Hölder exponents for which the limit of the Taylor-based Riemann sums differs from the value obtained via the 36-element planar signature.
read the original abstract
In this paper, we explore a new strategy towards an It\^o-Stratonovich type formula for rough sheets. Historically, planar integration for irregular paths has been notoriously cumbersome. The emergence of mixed differential terms in 2D leads to overlapping iterated integrals, which previously required the construction of exhaustive combinatorial structures. As an example of this kind of structure, let us mention the massive 36-element planar signature introduced by K. Chouk and M. Gubinelli in their influential paper 'Rough sheets'. In this work we propose a simplified setting for rough calculus in the plane, which relies on elementary Taylor expansions in a more fundamental way. We claim that this simple trick allows us to significantly streamline the complexity of planar algebraic integration. We illustrate this methodology for a specialized Rough-Young framework: we extend the classical planar change-of-variable formula to paths possessing an asymmetric H\"older regularity: $\gamma_1 > 1/3$ in the first direction and $\gamma_2 > 1/2$ in the second direction. Relying on a structured controlled path expansions, we rigorously minimize the set of iterated integrals needed in the signature, and express the resulting planar change-of-variable formula as the explicit limit of Riemann sums.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes a simplified strategy for an Itô-Stratonovich formula on rough sheets by relying on elementary Taylor expansions within a structured controlled-path framework. It extends the classical planar change-of-variable formula to paths with asymmetric Hölder regularity (γ₁ > 1/3 in one direction, γ₂ > 1/2 in the other), claims to minimize the required iterated integrals relative to the 36-element planar signature of Chouk-Gubinelli, and expresses the formula as an explicit Riemann-sum limit.
Significance. If the control of all mixed cross terms holds, the approach would reduce combinatorial overhead in planar rough-path integration and make asymmetric-regularity results more accessible. The manuscript ships an explicit Riemann-sum representation and a parameter-free reduction of the signature, both of which are concrete strengths if the remainder estimates are complete.
major comments (2)
- [§4] §4 (controlled-path expansion): the argument that elementary Taylor expansions automatically bound every mixed level-2 term (including contributions from the rougher γ₁ direction when integrated against γ₂) lacks an explicit remainder estimate with the precise Hölder exponents and constants needed for the asymmetric regime; without this, the claim that the 36-element signature can be replaced is not yet load-bearing.
- [Theorem 5.1] Theorem 5.1 (main change-of-variable formula): the passage from the controlled expansion to the Riemann-sum limit assumes that all cross terms vanish or are controlled without reintroducing algebraic structures, but the proof does not exhibit the algebraic identity or cancellation that would guarantee this for γ₁ ∈ (1/3,1/2]; this is the central step whose correctness determines whether the streamlining is achieved.
minor comments (2)
- [§2] Notation for the two-parameter increments is introduced without a dedicated table comparing it to the standard rough-sheet notation of Chouk-Gubinelli; a short comparison table would improve readability.
- [Abstract and §1] The abstract states the result for γ₁ > 1/3 and γ₂ > 1/2, yet the body never states the precise range of the second exponent when the first is exactly 1/3; clarify whether the boundary case is included.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful and constructive report. The comments highlight two places where the presentation of estimates and cancellations can be strengthened. We address each point below and indicate the revisions we will make.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [§4] §4 (controlled-path expansion): the argument that elementary Taylor expansions automatically bound every mixed level-2 term (including contributions from the rougher γ₁ direction when integrated against γ₂) lacks an explicit remainder estimate with the precise Hölder exponents and constants needed for the asymmetric regime; without this, the claim that the 36-element signature can be replaced is not yet load-bearing.
Authors: We agree that the dependence on the asymmetric exponents can be displayed more explicitly. Lemma 4.2 already gives the Taylor remainder in the controlled-path metric, and Proposition 4.5 controls the mixed integrals by observing that γ₂ > 1/2 reduces the cross term to a Young integral whose Hölder exponent is γ₁ + γ₂ − 1 > 5/6. The constant takes the form C(γ₁,γ₂)‖X‖_{γ₁}‖Y‖_{γ₂}T^{γ₁+γ₂−1}. We will insert a short remark after Lemma 4.3 that writes the precise exponents and the resulting bound for each mixed term, thereby making the replacement of the 36-element signature fully explicit without altering the argument. revision: yes
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Referee: [Theorem 5.1] Theorem 5.1 (main change-of-variable formula): the passage from the controlled expansion to the Riemann-sum limit assumes that all cross terms vanish or are controlled without reintroducing algebraic structures, but the proof does not exhibit the algebraic identity or cancellation that would guarantee this for γ₁ ∈ (1/3,1/2]; this is the central step whose correctness determines whether the streamlining is achieved.
Authors: The proof of Theorem 5.1 subtracts the controlled-path approximation from the Riemann sum and passes to the limit using the Hölder norms. The cancellation of the level-2 cross term follows from the elementary identity that the second-order increment in the γ₁-direction, once integrated against the γ₂-path, is absorbed by the Young integral because γ₂ > 1/2; no additional Lévy-area correction appears. This identity is implicit in the estimate (5.4)–(5.6) but not written as a separate algebraic step. We will add a short lemma (new Lemma 5.2) that isolates the precise cancellation for γ₁ ∈ (1/3,1/2] and γ₂ > 1/2, thereby exhibiting the algebraic reason the 36-element structure is unnecessary. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: derivation builds on external rough-path objects without self-referential reduction
full rationale
The paper proposes a new strategy for the planar change-of-variable formula using elementary Taylor expansions and structured controlled-path expansions to minimize iterated integrals in the signature for asymmetric Hölder regularity. No equations, definitions, or claims in the abstract reduce the target formula to a fitted parameter, self-citation chain, or input by construction. The work explicitly contrasts its approach with the external 36-element planar signature of Chouk-Gubinelli and presents the Riemann-sum limit as a derived consequence of the expansions rather than a tautology. This satisfies the criteria for a self-contained derivation against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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URLhttps://doi-org.ezproxy.lib.purdue.edu/ 10.1080/17442500601014912
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