Assume that there is a continuous random variable x, and its variance is var(x). Furthermore, there is a strictly monotonically increasing function f. Can anybody prove that the larger the var(x), the larger the variance of f(x), i.e. var(f(x))? One thing important is that the expectation of this random variable is fixed, with its variance to be the only part changeable.
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$\begingroup$ This sounds like a homework problem, and not a particularly well written one. (In particular, immediately after stating the problem, you point out that it has an important hypothesis that is not part of the statement.) $\endgroup$– LSpiceCommented Oct 18, 2019 at 19:40
2 Answers
It's not true. Take $f(x) = x^2$. Let $X$ take the values $0$ and $4$ each with probability $1/2$, and $Y$ take the values $100$ and $102$ each with probability $1/2$. Then we have $\newcommand{\Var}{\operatorname{Var}}\Var(X) = 4$ and $\Var(Y)=1$, but $\Var(f(X)) = 64$ and $\Var(f(Y)) = 40804$.
For an example going the other way, try $f(x) = x^{1/2}$.
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$\begingroup$ But what about the situation where the random variable has a fixed expectation, say 0 or something else, but different variances? $\endgroup$– dd KongCommented Oct 13, 2019 at 13:04
The Answer is still no even if all variables have mean zero. Take $f(x)=x|x|$. Let $X$ take values $-5,-1,1,5$, equally likely, and let $Y$ take values $-4,4$, equally likely. Then $Y$ has greater variance than $X$ but this is reversed when you apply $f$ to both variables. All this remains true for continuous variables as well. Add an independent variable $U$, uniform in $[-\epsilon, \epsilon ]$, to both $X$ and $Y$.
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$\begingroup$ Thanks. I edited the question again, and I want to know what will happen when the random variable is continuous. $\endgroup$– dd KongCommented Oct 13, 2019 at 13:57
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$\begingroup$ @ddKong: Continuity won't change anything. Replace each of the point masses with a normal distribution centered at the point and having very small variance. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 13, 2019 at 14:06
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3$\begingroup$ PS if you keep changing the question, no one will answer your questions. Better to think hard and post another question after checking many examples. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 13, 2019 at 14:11
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$\begingroup$ It's my fault that I didn't think carefully before posting the question, and this will be the final version; at least the main content won't be altered. $\endgroup$– dd KongCommented Oct 13, 2019 at 14:59