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6 - Order codings and dimensions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2012

Nathalie Caspard
Affiliation:
Université Paris-Est Créteil (UPEC)
Bruno Leclerc
Affiliation:
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Bernard Monjardet
Affiliation:
Université de Paris I
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Summary

We have several times considered codings (Definition 3.1) from an ordered set to another one. Indeed when an ordered set has a complex structure, it is natural to try to represent it in a simpler ordinal structure. In this chapter, we choose direct products of chains as the simple ordered structures (see Section 1.5.2). A coding of the ordered set P will then be a map sending P to an ordered subset, isomorphic to P, of such a product. This notion is particularized when adding conditions on the sizes of the chains. Thus, when all chains have size k (with k a fixed integer), as always assumed in the sequel, we will speak of a k-coding. The minimum number of chains required for the existence of a k-coding of P will be called the k-dimension of P.

In the first section, we study the 2-codings of an ordered set P, and the associated 2-dimension – also called Boolean dimension. Indeed, a 2-coding of P, i.e., a coding from P to a direct product of p chains of size 2, is equivalent to a coding from P to the Boolean lattice of subsets of a set of size p (such a coding may also be called Boolean). The Boolean dimension of an ordered set P is thus the minimum size of a set a family of subsets of which, ordered by set inclusion, reproduces exactly (i.e., is isomorphic to) P.

Type
Chapter
Information
Finite Ordered Sets
Concepts, Results and Uses
, pp. 163 - 191
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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