Indicator vector

In mathematics, the indicator vector, characteristic vector, or incidence vector of a subset T of a set S is the vector such that if and if

If S is countable and its elements are numbered so that , then where if and if

To put it more simply, the indicator vector of T is a vector with one element for each element in S, with that element being one if the corresponding element of S is in T, and zero if it is not.

An indicator vector is a special (countable) case of an indicator function.

Example

If S is the set of natural numbers , and T is some subset of the natural numbers, then the indicator vector is naturally a single point in the Cantor space: that is, an infinite sequence of 1's and 0's, indicating membership, or lack thereof, in T. Such vectors commonly occur in the study of arithmetical hierarchy.

Notes

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Indicator vector, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.