Previous: , Up: Nonlinear Equations   [Contents][Index]


20.2 Minimizers

Often it is useful to find the minimum value of a function rather than just the zeroes where it crosses the x-axis. fminbnd is designed for the simpler, but very common, case of a univariate function where the interval to search is bounded. For unbounded minimization of a function with potentially many variables use fminunc or fminsearch. The two functions use different internal algorithms and some knowledge of the objective function is required. For functions which can be differentiated, fminunc is appropriate. For functions with discontinuities, or for which a gradient search would fail, use fminsearch. See Optimization, for minimization with the presence of constraint functions. Note that searches can be made for maxima by simply inverting the objective function (Fto_max = -Fto_min).

[x, fval, info, output] = fminbnd (fun, a, b, options)

Find a minimum point of a univariate function.

fun should be a function handle or name. a, b specify a starting interval. options is a structure specifying additional options. Currently, fminbnd recognizes these options: "FunValCheck", "OutputFcn", "TolX", "MaxIter", "MaxFunEvals". For a description of these options, see optimset.

On exit, the function returns x, the approximate minimum point and fval, the function value thereof.

info is an exit flag that can have these values:

Notes: The search for a minimum is restricted to be in the interval bound by a and b. If you only have an initial point to begin searching from you will need to use an unconstrained minimization algorithm such as fminunc or fminsearch. fminbnd internally uses a Golden Section search strategy.

See also: fzero, fminunc, fminsearch, optimset.

fminunc (fcn, x0)
fminunc (fcn, x0, options)
[x, fval, info, output, grad, hess] = fminunc (fcn, …)

Solve an unconstrained optimization problem defined by the function fcn.

fcn should accept a vector (array) defining the unknown variables, and return the objective function value, optionally with gradient. fminunc attempts to determine a vector x such that fcn (x) is a local minimum.

x0 determines a starting guess. The shape of x0 is preserved in all calls to fcn, but otherwise is treated as a column vector.

options is a structure specifying additional options. Currently, fminunc recognizes these options: "FunValCheck", "OutputFcn", "TolX", "TolFun", "MaxIter", "MaxFunEvals", "GradObj", "FinDiffType", "TypicalX", "AutoScaling".

If "GradObj" is "on", it specifies that fcn, when called with two output arguments, also returns the Jacobian matrix of partial first derivatives at the requested point. TolX specifies the termination tolerance for the unknown variables x, while TolFun is a tolerance for the objective function value fval. The default is 1e-7 for both options.

For a description of the other options, see optimset.

On return, x is the location of the minimum and fval contains the value of the objective function at x.

info may be one of the following values:

1

Converged to a solution point. Relative gradient error is less than specified by TolFun.

2

Last relative step size was less than TolX.

3

Last relative change in function value was less than TolFun.

0

Iteration limit exceeded—either maximum number of algorithm iterations MaxIter or maximum number of function evaluations MaxFunEvals.

-1

Algorithm terminated by OutputFcn.

-3

The trust region radius became excessively small.

Optionally, fminunc can return a structure with convergence statistics (output), the output gradient (grad) at the solution x, and approximate Hessian (hess) at the solution x.

Application Notes: If the objective function is a single nonlinear equation of one variable then using fminbnd is usually a better choice.

The algorithm used by fminunc is a gradient search which depends on the objective function being differentiable. If the function has discontinuities it may be better to use a derivative-free algorithm such as fminsearch.

See also: fminbnd, fminsearch, optimset.

x = fminsearch (fun, x0)
x = fminsearch (fun, x0, options)
x = fminsearch (fun, x0, options, fun_arg1, fun_arg2, …)
[x, fval, exitflag, output] = fminsearch (…)

Find a value of x which minimizes the function fun.

The search begins at the point x0 and iterates using the Nelder & Mead Simplex algorithm (a derivative-free method). This algorithm is better-suited to functions which have discontinuities or for which a gradient-based search such as fminunc fails.

Options for the search are provided in the parameter options using the function optimset. Currently, fminsearch accepts the options: "TolX", "TolFun", "MaxFunEvals", "MaxIter", "Display", "FunValCheck", and "OutputFcn". For a description of these options, see optimset.

Additional inputs for the function fun can be passed as the fourth and higher arguments. To pass function arguments while using the default options values, use [] for options.

On exit, the function returns x, the minimum point, and fval, the function value at the minimum.

The third return value exitflag is

1

if the algorithm converged (size of the simplex is smaller than options.TolX AND the step in the function value between iterations is smaller than options.TolFun).

0

if the maximum number of iterations or the maximum number of function evaluations are exceeded.

-1

if the iteration is stopped by the "OutputFcn".

The fourth return value is a structure output with the fields, funcCount containing the number of function calls to fun, iterations containing the number of iteration steps, algorithm with the name of the search algorithm (always: "Nelder-Mead simplex direct search"), and message with the exit message.

Example:

fminsearch (@(x) (x(1)-5).^2+(x(2)-8).^4, [0;0])

See also: fminbnd, fminunc, optimset.

The function humps is a useful function for testing zero and extrema finding functions.

y = humps (x)
[x, y] = humps (x)

Evaluate a function with multiple minima, maxima, and zero crossings.

The output y is the evaluation of the rational function:

        1200*x^4 - 2880*x^3 + 2036*x^2 - 348*x - 88
 y = - ---------------------------------------------
         200*x^4 - 480*x^3 + 406*x^2 - 138*x + 17

x may be a scalar, vector or array. If x is omitted, the default range [0:0.05:1] is used.

When called with two output arguments, [x, y], x will contain the input values, and y will contain the output from humps.

Programming Notes: humps has two local maxima located near x = 0.300 and 0.893, a local minimum near x = 0.637, and zeros near x = -0.132 and 1.300. humps is a useful function for testing algorithms which find zeros or local minima and maxima.

Try demo humps to see a plot of the humps function.

See also: fzero, fminbnd, fminunc, fminsearch.


Previous: , Up: Nonlinear Equations   [Contents][Index]