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Saddle point

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: saddle point
 
(′sad·əl ′pöint)

(geology) col
(mathematics) A point where all the first partial derivatives of a function vanish but which is not a local maximum or minimum. For a matrix of real numbers, an element that is both the smallest element of its row and the largest element of its column, or vice versa. For a two-person, zero-sum game, an element of the payoff matrix that is the smallest element of its row and the largest element of its column, so that the corresponding strategies are optimal for each player, given the strategy chosen by the other player.


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Wikipedia: Saddle point
 
A saddle point on the graph of z=x²-y² (in red).
Saddle point between two hills (the intersection of the figure-eight z-contour).

In mathematics, a saddle point is a point in the domain of a function of two variables which is a stationary point but not a local extremum. At such a point, in general, the surface resembles a saddle that curves up in one direction, and curves down in a different direction (like a horse saddle or a mountain pass). In terms of contour lines, a saddle point can be recognized, in general, by a contour that appears to intersect itself. For example, two hills separated by a high pass will show up a saddle point, at the top of the pass, like a figure-eight contour line.

Contents

Mathematical discussion

A simple criterion for checking if a given stationary point of a real-valued function F(x,y) of two real variables is a saddle point is to compute the function's Hessian matrix at that point: if the Hessian is indefinite, then that point is a saddle point. For example, the Hessian matrix of the function z = x2y2 at the stationary point (0,0) is the matrix

\begin{bmatrix}
2 & 0\\
0 & -2 \\
\end{bmatrix}

which is indefinite. Therefore, this point is a saddle point. This criterion gives only a sufficient condition. For example, the point (0,0) is a saddle point for the function z = x4y4, but the Hessian matrix of this function at the origin is the null matrix, which is not indefinite.

In the most general terms, a saddle point for a smooth function (whose graph is a curve, surface or hypersurface) is a stationary point such that the curve/surface/etc. in the neighborhood of that point is not entirely on any side of the tangent space at that point.

The plot of y = x3 with a saddle point at 0.

In one dimension, a saddle point is a point which is both a stationary point and a point of inflection. Since it is a point of inflection, it is not a local extremum.

Other uses

In dynamical systems, a saddle point is a periodic point whose stable and unstable manifolds have a dimension which is not zero. If the dynamic is given by a differentiable map f then a point is hyperbolic if and only if the differential of ƒ n (where n is the period of the point) has no eigenvalue on the (complex) unit circle when computed at the point.

In a two-player zero sum game defined on a continuous space, the equilibrium point is a saddle point.

A saddle point is an element of the matrix which is both the smallest element in its column and the largest element in its row.

For a second-order linear autonomous systems, a critical point is a saddle point if the characteristic equation has one positive and one negative real eigenvalue [1].

See also

Notes

  1. ^ von Petersdorff 2006

References


 
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Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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