Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Optimality principle

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
Jump to: navigation, search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

A formal description of various notions of an optimum. Optimality principles normally reflect certain characteristics of an intuitive understanding of stability, profitability and fairness. It is essential that the simultaneous realization of all (or of a sufficient large number of) such characteristics often appears to be impossible, owing to their formal incompatibility. As the theory of optimality principles becomes of an axiomatic nature, new optimality principles arise which do not always possess an intuitive transparency.

Problems of optimality principles arise, for example, when that value of a variable is sought which simultaneously extremizes a number of given functions (the so-called multi-criterion extremal problems). Problems which require non-trivial optimality principles in order to be solved actually arise in game theory (cf. Games, theory of). One of the simplest game-theoretic optimality principles is the minimax principle. Other optimality principles are realized in the form of a core or a von Neumann–Morgenstern solution (cf. Core in the theory of games), a Shapley value, etc.

For the Bellman principle of optimality see Dynamic programming.


Comments

See also Pontryagin maximum principle; Optimal control.

How to Cite This Entry:
Optimality principle. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Optimality_principle&oldid=32093
This article was adapted from an original article by N.N. Vorob'ev (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article