English

Finitary coding and Gaussian concentration for random fields

Probability 2026-03-27 v2 Mathematical Physics Dynamical Systems math.MP

Abstract

We study Gaussian concentration inequalities for random fields obtained as finitary codings of i.i.d.\ fields, linking concentration properties to coding structure. A finitary coding represents a dependent field as a shift-equivariant image of an i.i.d.\ process, where each output depends on a finite but configuration-dependent portion of the input. Gaussian concentration corresponds to uniform sub-Gaussian bounds for local observables. Our main abstract result shows that Gaussian concentration is preserved under finitary codings with finite second moment of the coding volume. The proof relies on a refinement of the bounded-differences inequality, due to Talagrand and Marton, handling configuration-dependent influences. Under an additional structural assumption, satisfied in particular by coupling-from-the-past codings, a finite first moment suffices. These moment conditions are sharp. We apply these results to Gibbs measures, Markov random fields on Zd\mathbb Z^d, and a broad class of one-dimensional processes. Using recent constructions of finitary codings, notably by Spinka and collaborators, we obtain sharp necessary and sufficient conditions for Gaussian concentration in classical lattice models, including the Ising, Potts, and random-cluster models: it holds if and only if the model lies in the full uniqueness regime, extending previous results beyond strict subregimes. In one dimension, we treat processes with possibly unbounded memory. For countable-state Markov chains, we obtain equivalent characterizations in terms of geometric ergodicity, exponential return-time tails, and finitary i.i.d.\ codings with exponential tails.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2602.14618,
  title  = {Finitary coding and Gaussian concentration for random fields},
  author = {J. -R. Chazottes and S. Gallo and D. Takahashi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.14618},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

36 pages, 1 figure. The presentation has been streamlined: the two sharpness results are now in the main section. No changes have been made to the mathematics aside from the correction of a few typos

R2 v1 2026-07-01T10:38:16.221Z