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  2. Concave function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concave_function

    A function f is concave over a convex set if and only if the function −f is a convex function over the set. The sum of two concave functions is itself concave and so is the pointwise minimum of two concave functions, i.e. the set of concave functions on a given domain form a semifield.

  3. Logarithmically concave function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithmically_concave...

    Every concave function that is nonnegative on its domain is log-concave. However, the reverse does not necessarily hold. An example is the Gaussian function f ( x ) = exp(− x 2 /2) which is log-concave since log f ( x ) = − x 2 /2 is a concave function of x .

  4. Logarithmically concave sequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithmically_concave...

    The rows of Pascal's triangle are examples for logarithmically concave sequences. In mathematics, a sequence a = (a 0, a 1, ..., a n) of nonnegative real numbers is called a logarithmically concave sequence, or a log-concave sequence for short, if a i 2 ≥ a i−1 a i+1 holds for 0 < i < n.

  5. Convex function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convex_function

    In simple terms, a convex function graph is shaped like a cup (or a straight line like a linear function), while a concave function's graph is shaped like a cap . A twice-differentiable function of a single variable is convex if and only if its second derivative is nonnegative on its entire domain. [1]

  6. Concavification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concavification

    As an example, consider the function () = on the domain .This function is quasiconcave, but it is not concave (in fact, it is strictly convex). It can be concavified, for example, using the monotone transformation () = /, since (()) = is concave.

  7. Sigmoid function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigmoid_function

    A common example of a sigmoid function is the logistic function, ... and it is concave for values greater than that point: in many of the examples here, ...

  8. Jensen's inequality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jensen's_inequality

    Jensen's inequality generalizes the statement that a secant line of a convex function lies above its graph. Visualizing convexity and Jensen's inequality. In mathematics, Jensen's inequality, named after the Danish mathematician Johan Jensen, relates the value of a convex function of an integral to the integral of the convex function.

  9. Quasiconvex function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasiconvex_function

    A quasiconvex function that is not convex A function that is not quasiconvex: the set of points in the domain of the function for which the function values are below the dashed red line is the union of the two red intervals, which is not a convex set. The probability density function of the normal distribution is quasiconcave but not concave.