In mathematics, a signed set is a set of elements together with an assignment of a sign (positive or negative) to each element of the set.
Signed sets may be represented mathematically as an ordered pair of disjoint sets, one set for their positive elements and another for their negative elements. Alternatively, they may be represented as a Boolean function, a function whose domain is the underlying unsigned set (possibly specified explicitly as a separate part of the representation) and whose range is a two-element set representing the signs.
Signed sets may also be called
\Z2
Signed sets are fundamental to the definition of oriented matroids.
They may also be used to define the faces of a hypercube. If the hypercube consists of all points in Euclidean space of a given dimension whose Cartesian coordinates are in the interval
[-1,+1]
-1
+1
[-1,+1]
The number of signed subsets of a given finite set of
n
3n
r
2r\binom{n}{r},
\sumr2r\binom{n}{r}=3n.
An analogue of the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem on intersecting families of sets holds also for signed sets. The intersection of two signed sets is defined to be the signed set of elements that belong to both and have the same sign in both. According to this theorem, for any a collection of signed subsets of an
n
r
2r-1\binom{n-1}{r-1}.
r
r\len/2
2r-1
r