Both are relevant, and "the misconception that Langevin equation is the universal stochastic differential equation for all kinds of noisy systems is responsible for the difficulties mentioned"* in your post.
Take the SDE from Thomas' answer,
$$\frac{dy}{dt} = A(y) + C(y)L(t)$$
where $L(t)$ is the noise term. Suppose we can turn the noise off, so we'd only be looking at the isolated, deterministic, system, and suppose that we got:
$$\frac{dy}{dt} = A(y)$$
It is thus obvious that the noise term in this case must be interpreted as per Stratonovich, because an Itô interpretation would change the dynamics of the isolated system.
Above we had assumed, as one does, that $\langle L(t)L(t') \rangle = D \delta(t-t')$, but rarely are actual physical processes made out of Dirac deltas. Now if they are not, then by Wong-Zakai, Stratonovich is the only possible interpretation here (i.e. if $L(t)$ is more general, and as it approaches a delta, Stratonovich is the integration form that arises).
Now by turning the noise on and off we have arrived at the conclusion that Stratonovich is the only way forward, but in the very beginning I said that both formulations are relevant. Indeed, what if the noise cannot be separated out?
The important distinction is to make between external and internal sources of noise. We dealt with the external, but what if the noise is internal, and is impossible to turn off like say in chemical reactions? It's not that we have a deterministic process with a noise term slapped on top, we have a stochastic process and one might be able to argue that the averages behave in a deterministic manner, but by no means can then one then simply just add a noise term back on top without more justification: "For internal noise one cannot just postulate a nonlinear Langevin equation or a Fokker-Planck equation and then hope to determine its coefficients from macroscopic data. The more fundamental approach of [the expansion of the master equation] is indispensable."
* Any quotes in my answer have been taken from the definitive book on the matter: Stochastic Processes in Physics and Chemistry by van Kampen, which I strongly suggest you consult for more detailed explanations of the issues and how one goes about dealing with them.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2016-03-30 10:09 (UTC), posted by SE-user alarge