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 scientist Andrey Kolmogorov.
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If f is a function which maps an interval
of the real line to the real numbers, and is both continuous and injective then we can define the f-mean of two numbers

as

For
numbers
,the f-mean is

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
.
to be the real line and
, (or indeed any linear function
,
not equal to 0) then the f-mean corresponds to the arithmetic mean.
to be the set of positive real numbers and
, then the f-mean corresponds to the geometric mean. According to the f-mean properties, the result does not depend on the base of the logarithm as long as it is positive and not 1.
to be the set of positive real numbers and
, then the f-mean corresponds to the harmonic mean.
to be the set of positive real numbers and
, then the f-mean corresponds to the power mean with exponent
.
it holds

:
.
is monotonic, then
is monotonic.
of two variables has the mediality property
and the self-distributivity property
. Moreover, any of those properties is essentially sufficient to characterize quasi-arithmetic means; see Aczél–Dhombres, Chapter 17.
of two variables has the balancing property
. An interesting problem is whether this condition (together with fixed-point, symmetry, monotonicity and continuity properties) implies that the mean is quasi-arthmetic. Georg Aumann showed in the 1930s that the answer is no in general,[1] but that if one additionally assumes
to be an analytic function then the answer is positive.[2]Means are usually homogeneous, but for most functions
, the f-mean is not. Indeed, the only homogeneous quasi-arithmetic means are the power means and the geometric mean; see Hardy–Littlewood–Pólya, page 68.
The homogeneity property can be achieved by normalizing the input values by some (homogeneous) mean
.

However this modification may violate monotonicity and the partitioning property of the mean.
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