Jensen's inequality
From Wikimization
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<math>\phi(ta + (1-t)b) \leq t \phi(a) + (1-t) \phi(b)</math> | <math>\phi(ta + (1-t)b) \leq t \phi(a) + (1-t) \phi(b)</math> | ||
| - | whenever <math>\,0 \leq t \leq 1\,</math> and <math>\,a, b\,</math> are in the | + | whenever <math>\,0 \leq t \leq 1\,</math> and <math>\,a, b\,</math> are in the domain of <math>\,\phi\,</math>. |
It follows by induction on | It follows by induction on | ||
| Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
The comment above says that <math>\,\phi(t) \geq L(t)\,</math> for | The comment above says that <math>\,\phi(t) \geq L(t)\,</math> for | ||
| - | all <math>\,t\,</math> in the | + | all <math>\,t\,</math> in the domain of <math>\,\phi\,</math>. So |
<math>\begin{array}{rl}\int \phi \circ f &\geq \int L \circ f\\ | <math>\begin{array}{rl}\int \phi \circ f &\geq \int L \circ f\\ | ||
Revision as of 22:40, 13 July 2008
By definition is convex if and only if
whenever and
are in the domain of
.
It follows by induction on
that if
for
then
(1)
Jensen's inequality says this:
If is a probability
measure on
,
is a real-valued function on
,
is integrable, and
is convex on the range
of
then
(2)
Proof 1: By some limiting argument we can assume
that is simple (this limiting argument is the missing
detail).
That is, is the disjoint union of
and
is constant on each
.
Say and
is the value of
on
.
Then (1) and (2) say exactly the same thing. QED.
Proof 2: The lemma shows that has a right-hand
derivative at every point and that the graph of
lies above the "tangent" line through any point on the
graph with slope = the right derivative.
Say , let
the right derivative of
at
, and let
The comment above says that for
all
in the domain of
. So
D. Ullrich