The inequality remains valid for provided that and .[citation needed] The proof above holds for any function such that is convex, such as all continuous non-decreasing functions. Generalizations to non-decreasing functions other than the logarithm is given in Csiszár, 2004.
Another generalization is due to Dannan, Neff and Thiel, who showed that if and are positive real numbers with and , and , then . [2]
Applications
The log sum inequality can be used to prove inequalities in information theory. Gibbs' inequality states that the Kullback–Leibler divergence is non-negative, and equal to zero precisely if its arguments are equal.[3] One proof uses the log sum inequality.
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