Ratio of sums vs sum of ratio Is anyone aware of any general (or perhaps not so general) relationsh

Loreenwk

Loreenwk

Answered question

2022-05-28

Ratio of sums vs sum of ratio
Is anyone aware of any general (or perhaps not so general) relationship (inequality for instance) relating
A ( x , y ) = z f ( x , y , z ) z g ( y , z )
and
B ( x , y ) = z ( f ( x , y , z ) g ( y , z ) )
?
Specific context (for what I'm dealing with, but not necessarily the question) is that x , y , x f ( x , y , z ) = 1 and y , x g ( y , z ) = 1 and f ( x , y , z ) 0 and g ( y , z ) 0 x , y , z. I.e. probabilities (or more generally, I guess, measures).
It seems like it could 'vaguely' be related to log sum inequalities (when transformed) or Jensen's inequality perhaps?

Answer & Explanation

tradirasi

tradirasi

Beginner2022-05-29Added 6 answers

If you assume that both f and g are nonnegative, you have A ( x , y ) B ( x , y )
Proof:
f ( x , y , z ) z g ( y , z ) f ( x , y , z ) g ( y , z ) , since g ( y , z ) z g ( y , z )
So A ( x , y ) = z f ( x , y , z ) z g ( y , z ) = z f ( x , y , z ) z g ( y , z ) z f ( x , y , z ) g ( y , z ) = B ( x , y )

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