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Nonlinear models such as have been appearing in the applied catastrophe theory literature are almost universally deterministic, as opposed to stochastic (probabilistic). The purpose of this article is to show how to convert a deterministic catastrophe model into a stochastic model with the aid of several reasonable assumptions, and how to calculate explicitly the resulting multimodal equilibrium probability density. Examples of such models from epidemiology, psychology, sociology, and demography are presented. Lastly, a new statistical technique is presented, with which the parameters of empirical multimodal frequency distributions may be estimated.
Loren Cobb (Sun,) studied this question.