If we have that the contours of a response surface are elliptical and the response is given by the f

Leonel Contreras

Leonel Contreras

Answered question

2022-06-13

If we have that the contours of a response surface are elliptical and the response is given by the following function:
exp ( ( w 2 + 1 4 l 2 1 4 w l ) )
then if we maximize this function w.r.t l holding w fixed at 1/2.
And if we call the maximizer l-star, then holding l-star fixed, maximize over w. How to show that the overall max isn't achieved?
My approach: I got the partial of the above function w.r.t. l and then tried to evaluate it at 1/2, but got stuck. It most likely will involve some analysis of Hessians.

Answer & Explanation

trajeronls

trajeronls

Beginner2022-06-14Added 21 answers

The exponential function does not actually matter, because it is strictly increasing. The maxima and minima of exp ( f ( w , l ) ) are attained (or not attained) precisely at the same points as maxima and minima of f ( w , l ) itself. One advantage of working with f ( w , l ) = ( w 2 + l 2 / 4 l / 2 ) is that its derivatives are simpler than for e f .

And another advantage that we don't even need calculus: it's a quadratic polynomial in which we can complete the square.
(1) ( w 2 + l 2 / 4 l / 2 ) = ( w 2 + ( l 1 ) 2 / 4 1 / 4 )
To maximize −(…), we minimize the content of the parentheses. The smallest w 2 can be is 0, at w = 0. The smallest ( l 1 ) 2 / 4 can be is 0, at l = 1. Therefore, at w = 0, l = 1 the global maximum of (1) is attained, and it is equal to 1/4.

Consequently, e f has maximum value e 1 / 4 .

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