• Source: Logarithmically concave sequence
  • In mathematics, a sequence a = (a0, a1, ..., an) of nonnegative real numbers is called a logarithmically concave sequence, or a log-concave sequence for short, if ai2 ≥ ai−1ai+1 holds for 0 < i < n .
    Remark: some authors (explicitly or not) add two further conditions in the definition of log-concave sequences:

    a is non-negative
    a has no internal zeros; in other words, the support of a is an interval of Z.
    These conditions mirror the ones required for log-concave functions.
    Sequences that fulfill the three conditions are also called Pólya Frequency sequences of order 2 (PF2 sequences). Refer to chapter 2 of for a discussion on the two notions. For instance, the sequence (1,1,0,0,1) satisfies the concavity inequalities but not the internal zeros condition.
    Examples of log-concave sequences are given by the binomial coefficients along any row of Pascal's triangle and the elementary symmetric means of a finite sequence of real numbers.


    References



    Stanley, R. P. (December 1989). "Log-Concave and Unimodal Sequences in Algebra, Combinatorics, and Geometry". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 576: 500–535. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1989.tb16434.x.


    See also


    Unimodality
    Logarithmically concave function
    Logarithmically concave measure

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