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  2. Talk:Matrix calculus/Archive 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Matrix_calculus/Archive_2

    I am new to the Hessian vs Jacobian debate, but appreciate the consistency of this article. The section on trace derivatives seems to go against this however: the gradient of a sc

  3. Hessian matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hessian_matrix

    The above rules stating that extrema are characterized (among critical points with a non-singular Hessian) by a positive-definite or negative-definite Hessian cannot apply here since a bordered Hessian can neither be negative-definite nor positive-definite, as = if is any vector whose sole non-zero entry is its first.

  4. Jacobian matrix and determinant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobian_matrix_and...

    The Jacobian determinant is sometimes simply referred to as "the Jacobian". The Jacobian determinant at a given point gives important information about the behavior of f near that point. For instance, the continuously differentiable function f is invertible near a point p ∈ R n if the Jacobian determinant at p is non-zero.

  5. Quasi-Newton method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasi-Newton_method

    Newton's method requires the Jacobian matrix of all partial derivatives of a multivariate function when used to search for zeros or the Hessian matrix when used for finding extrema. Quasi-Newton methods, on the other hand, can be used when the Jacobian matrices or Hessian matrices are unavailable or are impractical to compute at every iteration.

  6. University of Chicago Legal Forum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Chicago...

    Volume 2009 - Civil Rights Law and the Low-Wage Worker; Volume 2008 - Law in a Networked World; Volume 2007 - Immigration Law and Policy; Volume 2006 - Law and Life: Definitions and Decisionmaking; Volume 2005 - Punishment and Crime; Volume 2004 - The Public and Private Faces of Family Law; Volume 2003 - Current Issues in Class Action Litigation

  7. Forum selection clause - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forum_selection_clause

    In contract law, a forum selection clause (sometimes called a dispute resolution clause, choice of court clause, governing law clause, jurisdiction clause or an arbitration clause, depending on its form) in a contract with a conflict of laws element allows the parties to agree that any disputes relating to that contract will be resolved in a specific forum.

  8. Matrix calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_calculus

    In mathematics, matrix calculus is a specialized notation for doing multivariable calculus, especially over spaces of matrices.It collects the various partial derivatives of a single function with respect to many variables, and/or of a multivariate function with respect to a single variable, into vectors and matrices that can be treated as single entities.

  9. Broyden's method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broyden's_method

    Newton's method for solving f(x) = 0 uses the Jacobian matrix, J, at every iteration. However, computing this Jacobian can be a difficult and expensive operation; for large problems such as those involving solving the Kohn–Sham equations in quantum mechanics the number of variables can be in the hundreds of thousands. The idea behind Broyden ...