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For example, I have a function to optimize: $$f_1(x,y) = x^2+y^2, \quad x_{lb}\le x\le x_{ub},\quad y_{lb}\le y\le y_{ub}$$ Then I apply rotation by $\theta$ plus translation by $x_0$ and $y_0$: $$f_2(x,y) = ((x+x_0)\cos\theta + (y+y_0)\sin\theta)^2 + (-(x+x_0)\sin\theta + (y+y_0)\cos\theta)^2$$ Intuition tells these functions are equivalent given bounds are far enough from $x_0$ and $y_0$. However, practical optimization methods, e.g. Differential Evolution, usually have problems with rotated and translated functions - they optimize original functions well, but no so good the rotated versions.

So, I'd like to know some formal general proof that for optimization (especially non-convex case) these functions should be equivalent. And it's also interesting to hear reasoning why DE optimization methods may fail.

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    $\begingroup$ If they are rotational-tranlational invariance... they will be equivalent. i mean, the function $f(x) = x^Tx$ is invariant w.r.t. rotations $x'=Rx$ because $f(x') = (Rx)^TRx = x^TR^TRx=x^Tx$, since $R$ is an orthogonal matrix. $\endgroup$
    – HBR
    Commented May 9, 2018 at 15:34
  • $\begingroup$ Then how do I know if a function has a rotational-translational invariance? Isn't all functions rotational-translational invariant from optimization standpoint? $\endgroup$
    – aleksv
    Commented May 9, 2018 at 15:50
  • $\begingroup$ The minimum of $f(x) = (x-x_0)^T(x-x_0)$ is obviously $x_0$. If this minimum depends on the translation, then it is not translational invariant. $\endgroup$
    – HBR
    Commented May 9, 2018 at 16:34
  • $\begingroup$ It's likely that the steps taken by your optimization method aren't invariant under this transformation, which explains why you might get different results. There are methods (e.g. Newton's method) that are invariant under invertible linear transformations. $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 7, 2020 at 17:13

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Let $f: \mathbb R^N→\mathbb R$, $x \in \mathbb R^N$ and $z=t(x)$ where $ t$ is a bijective mapping.

Let

$$x^* = \text{argmax}_x f(x)$$

$$x_1^*= \text{argmax}_x f(t(x))$$

Using $z=t(x)$, and applying $t$ on both sides,

$$t(x_1^*)= t\left(\text{argmax}_{t^{-1}(z)} f(z)\right)$$

So we have

$$t(x_1^*)= \text{argmax}_{z} f(z) = x^*$$

For intuition, we can think of the transformation as doing some kind of rearrangement of points in the domain. So the max value of the function remains unchanged. The argument which maximizes will be different. We get the original solution by transforming the argument.

If you are already doing the argument transformation, then may be you need to transform the initial points also to get similar results as that of the original optimization.

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