Inequalities: theory of majorization and its applications (Q5894000)

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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5829875
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Inequalities: theory of majorization and its applications
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5829875

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    Inequalities: theory of majorization and its applications (English)
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    28 December 2010
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    The book present a comprehensive (909 pages) overview of majorization theory, including definitions and (in some places) proofs. The book is divided into five parts: Theory of majorization (Chapters 1--6), Mathematical applications (7--10), Stochastic applications (11--13), Generalizations (14--15), and Complementary topics (16--20). Chapter 1 (Introduction) offers an overview of basic results. Chapter 2 (Doubly stochastic matrices) discusses these matrices and offers an insight into the geometry of majorization. Chapter 3 (Schur-convex functions) studies functions preserving the order of majorization. Chapters 4 (Equivalent conditions for majorization), 5 (Preservation and generation of majorization) and 6 (Rearrangements and majorization) show equivalent conditions and some ways in which the ordering can arise. The following chapters are devoted to mathematical applications: Chapter 7 (Combinatorial analysis), 8 (Geometric inequalities), 9 (Matrix theory), and to applications in statistics: Chapter 11 (Stochastic majorizations), 12 (Probabilistic, statistical and other applications), and 13 (Additional statistical applications). Generalizations are included in Chapter 14 (Orderings extending majorization) and 15 (Multivariate majorization). The aim of the final part is to provide necessary and complementary topics on convex functions and classical inequalities. It includes Chapter 16 (Convex functions and some classical inequalities), 17 (Stochastic ordering), 18 (Total positivity), 19 (Matrix factorizations, compounds, direct products, and \(M\)-matrices), and 20 (Extremal representations of matrix functions). For a review of the first edition (1979) see Zbl 0437.26007.
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    majorization
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    rearrangements
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    doubly stochastic matrices
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    convex functions
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    inequalities
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    combinatorial analysis
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