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Accumulation
The total amount of change over time, often represented as area under a curve in calculus.
Differentiation
The process of finding the rate of change of a quantity.
Integration
The process of calculating the accumulation of a quantity over an interval.
Area Under the Curve
Represents the total accumulated change in a quantity when graphed.
Dimensional Analysis
A method of checking the units in an accumulation problem to ensure correctness.
Riemann Sum
An approximation of the area under a curve by dividing it into shapes (usually rectangles).
Left Riemann Sum (LRAM)
A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the left endpoint.
Right Riemann Sum (RRAM)
A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the right endpoint.
Midpoint Riemann Sum (MRAM)
A method where the height of rectangles is determined by the function value at the midpoint of the interval.
Trapezoidal Sum
A method that uses trapezoids instead of rectangles to approximate the area under a curve.
Concavity
The direction of the curve, important for determining over- or underestimation in trapezoidal sums.
Increasing Function
A function where the y-values increase as the x-values increase.
Decreasing Function
A function where the y-values decrease as the x-values increase.
Concave Up
A function that opens upward, where trapezoids will overestimate the area.
Concave Down
A function that opens downward, where trapezoids will underestimate the area.
Definite Integral
A limit of a Riemann sum that represents the exact area under a curve.
Limit Definition of the Definite Integral
As the number of rectangles approaches infinity, the approximation becomes the exact area.
Sample Point
The specific x-value used to determine the height of rectangles in a Riemann sum.
Width of Rectangles (Δx)
The width of each rectangle used in Riemann sums, calculated as (b-a)/n.
Upper Limit of Integration
The value 'b' in the definite integral, indicating the end of the interval.
Lower Limit of Integration
The value 'a' in the definite integral, indicating the start of the interval.
Misunderstanding Concavity and Slope
A common mistake where students confuse slope with concavity when determining over- or underestimation.
Calculating Area with Non-Uniform Widths
A mistake where students assume rectangular widths are constant when they are not.
n vs k Confusion
The error of mixing up 'n', the total number of rectangles, with 'k', the index in summation.
Overestimate
When an approximation method results in a value greater than the actual area.
Underestimate
When an approximation method results in a value less than the actual area.
Functional Representation
The expression or equation that defines the function being analyzed in integration.