Gaussian correlation inequality


The Gaussian correlation inequality, formerly known as the Gaussian correlation conjecture, is a mathematical theorem in the fields of mathematical statistics and convex geometry. A special case of the inequality was published as a conjecture in a paper from 1955; further development was given by Olive Jean Dunn in 1958. The general case was stated in 1972, also as a conjecture.
The inequality remained unproven until 2014, when Thomas Royen, a German statistician, proved it using relatively elementary tools. The proof was not generally known when it was published in 2014, due to Royen's relative anonymity and that the proof was published in a predatory journal. Another reason was multiple futile attempts to prove it, causing skepticism among mathematicians in the field.
The conjecture, and its solution, came to public attention in 2017, when reports of Royen's proof were published in mainstream media.

The problem

The Gaussian correlation inequality states:
Let be an n-dimensional Gaussian probability measure on, i.e. a multivariate normal distribution, centered at the origin. Then for all convex sets that are symmetric about the origin,
As a simple example, one can think of darts in the plane distributed according to a multivariate normal distribution. If we are considering a circle and a rectangle, both centered at the origin, then the proportion of the darts landing in the intersection of both shapes is no less than the product of the proportions of the darts landing in each shape.
Royen's proof of the conjecture generalizes it, as well as demonstrating the same statement for the gamma distribution.

General