Total variation
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In mathematics, the total variation of a real-valued function f on the bounded interval [a, b] is
- <math>\sup_P \sum_i | f(x_{i+1})-f(x_i) | </math>
the supremum running over all partitions P = { x1, ..., xn } of the interval [a, b]. In effect, the total variation is the vertical component of the arc-length of the graph of f. The function f is said to be of bounded variation precisely if the total variation of f is finite.
Total variation distance in probability theory
In probability theory, the total variation distance between two probability measures P and Q on a sigma-algebra F is
- <math>\sup\left\{\,\left|P(A)-Q(A)\right| : A\in F\,\right\}.</math>
Informally, this is the largest possible difference between the probabilities that the two probability distributions can assign to the same event.
Total variation in measure theory
Given a signed measure μ on a measurable space (X,Σ), and its Hahn-Jordan decomposition into the difference of two non-negative measures
- <math>\mu=\mu^+-\mu^-,</math>
its variation is the non-negative measure
- <math>|\mu|=\mu^++\mu^-,</math>
and its total variation is defined as
- <math>\|\mu\|=|\mu|(X).</math>de:Variation (Mathematik)