Talk:Kantorovich Problem: Difference between revisions
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(Kantorovich Discussion) |
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==Beginning== | |||
* Instead of ``The Kantorovich's ot problem``, just ``Kantorovich's ot problem`` | |||
* ``Leonid Kantorovich, the founder of modern optimization, who was awarded a Nobel...' | |||
* Change the phrase ``Leonid Kantorovich`` to a link to his wikipedia page | |||
* Add a link to Nobel prize: [[https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/economic-sciences/1975/press-release/]] | |||
==Introduction== | |||
* ``beside THE Monge Problem`` | |||
* change the phrase ``Monge Problem`` to a link to the OT wiki page. | |||
* While everything you say in the introduction is correct, it seems a little early to get into this level of technicality. Why not you move this section to the bottom and rename it ``Comparison to Monge Problem``? | |||
* Instead, your introduction can give an heuristic interpretation of the problem, in terms of ``moving around piles of dirt``, which would be understandable to a non-mathematician. You can end the introduction with statement of Kantorovich's OT problem, rather than having this in its own separate section. | |||
* You will need to define what you mean by <math> \Pi(\mu,\nu) </math> | |||
==References== | |||
* There is an error in the references |
Revision as of 22:08, 13 May 2020
Beginning
- Instead of ``The Kantorovich's ot problem``, just ``Kantorovich's ot problem``
- ``Leonid Kantorovich, the founder of modern optimization, who was awarded a Nobel...'
- Change the phrase ``Leonid Kantorovich`` to a link to his wikipedia page
- Add a link to Nobel prize: [[1]]
Introduction
- ``beside THE Monge Problem``
- change the phrase ``Monge Problem`` to a link to the OT wiki page.
- While everything you say in the introduction is correct, it seems a little early to get into this level of technicality. Why not you move this section to the bottom and rename it ``Comparison to Monge Problem``?
- Instead, your introduction can give an heuristic interpretation of the problem, in terms of ``moving around piles of dirt``, which would be understandable to a non-mathematician. You can end the introduction with statement of Kantorovich's OT problem, rather than having this in its own separate section.
- You will need to define what you mean by
References
- There is an error in the references