3.1: Techniques of Antidifferentiation (Integration)
Antidifferentiation (integration) can model real-life applications to determine the relationship among functions or a group of functions. Integration rules can help you eventually solve problems in multiple dimensions. Antidifferentiation is the opposite operation of differentiation, and this allows you to find values, such as areas under a curve, that are challenging without these concepts.
Subunit 3.1 focuses on the various techniques of antidifferentiation (integration) used in calculus. The subunit starts with the basic rules of antidifferentiation and then moves on to specialized cases such as trigonometry, integration by parts, integration by substitution, and partial fractions. These methods are critical to understanding definite integrals and additional calculus-related applications.