Quasi-arithmetic mean


In mathematics and statistics, the quasi-arithmetic mean or generalised f-mean is one generalisation of the more familiar means such as the arithmetic mean and the geometric mean, using a function. It is also called Kolmogorov mean after Russian mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov. It is a broader generalization than the regular generalized mean.

Definition

If f is a function which maps an interval of the real line to the real numbers, and is both continuous and injective, the f-mean of numbers
is defined as, which can also be written
We require f to be injective in order for the inverse function to exist. Since is defined over an interval, lies within the domain of.
Since f is injective and continuous, it follows that f is a strictly monotonic function, and therefore that the f-mean is neither larger than the largest number of the tuple nor smaller than the smallest number in.

Examples

The following properties hold for for any single function :
Symmetry: The value of is unchanged if its arguments are permuted.
Fixed point: for all x, .
Monotonicity: is monotonic in each of its arguments.
Continuity: is continuous in each of its arguments .
Replacement: Subsets of elements can be averaged a priori, without altering the mean, given that the multiplicity of elements is maintained. With it holds:
Partitioning: The computation of the mean can be split into computations of equal sized sub-blocks:
Self-distributivity: For any quasi-arithmetic mean of two variables:.
Mediality: For any quasi-arithmetic mean of two variables:.
Balancing: For any quasi-arithmetic mean of two variables:.
Central limit theorem : Under regularity conditions, for a sufficiently large sample, is approximately normal.
Scale-invariance: The quasi-arithmetic mean is invariant with respect to offsets and scaling of : .

Characterization

There are several different sets of properties that characterize the quasi-arithmetic mean.
s are usually homogeneous, but for most functions, the f-mean is not.
Indeed, the only homogeneous quasi-arithmetic means are the power means ; see Hardy-Littlewood-Pólya, page 68.
The homogeneity property can be achieved by normalizing the input values by some mean.
However this modification may violate monotonicity and the partitioning property of the mean.