riseincreaselike
Riseincreaselike is a descriptive term used in data analysis and mathematics to denote growth patterns in which the increments of a quantity increase as the independent variable grows. In practice, it signals an accelerating or convex rate of increase rather than a constant or diminishing rate.
In discrete time, a sequence a_n is described as riseincreaselike if the first difference a_{n+1}-a_n increases
In the continuous setting, a function f is riseincreaselike on an interval if it is strictly increasing
Common examples include quadratic functions with positive second derivative, exponential growth, and other convex growth patterns.
Applications appear in time-series analysis, economics, demography, and algorithmic performance, where identifying riseincreaselike patterns helps in
The term is not widely formalized in standard mathematical references, and some authors prefer to describe
See also: convex function, acceleration, second difference, growth rate.