85 research outputs found
A generalization of Goodstein's theorem: interpolation by polynomial functions of distributive lattices
We consider the problem of interpolating functions partially defined over a
distributive lattice, by means of lattice polynomial functions. Goodstein's
theorem solves a particular instance of this interpolation problem on a
distributive lattice L with least and greatest elements 0 and 1, resp.: Given
an n-ary partial function f over L, defined on all 0-1 tuples, f can be
extended to a lattice polynomial function p over L if and only if f is
monotone; in this case, the interpolating polynomial p is unique. We extend
Goodstein's theorem to a wider class of n-ary partial functions f over a
distributive lattice L, not necessarily bounded, where the domain of f is a
cuboid of the form D={a1,b1}x...x{an,bn} with ai<bi, and determine the class of
such partial functions which can be interpolated by lattice polynomial
functions. In this wider setting, interpolating polynomials are not necessarily
unique; we provide explicit descriptions of all possible lattice polynomial
functions which interpolate these partial functions, when such an interpolation
is available.Comment: 12 page
Proofs of some binomial identities using the method of last squares
We give combinatorial proofs for some identities involving binomial sums that
have no closed form.Comment: 8 pages, 16 figure
Pseudo-polynomial functions over finite distributive lattices
In this paper we consider an aggregation model f: X1 x ... x Xn --> Y for
arbitrary sets X1, ..., Xn and a finite distributive lattice Y, factorizable as
f(x1, ..., xn) = p(u1(x1), ..., un(xn)), where p is an n-variable lattice
polynomial function over Y, and each uk is a map from Xk to Y. The resulting
functions are referred to as pseudo-polynomial functions. We present an
axiomatization for this class of pseudo-polynomial functions which differs from
the previous ones both in flavour and nature, and develop general tools which
are then used to obtain all possible such factorizations of a given
pseudo-polynomial function.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
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