The descriptive set-theoretic complexity of the set of points of continuity of a multi-valued function (Extended Abstract)

In this article we treat a notion of continuity for a multi-valued function F and we compute the descriptive set-theoretic complexity of the set of all x for which F is continuous at x. We give condit

The descriptive set-theoretic complexity of the set of points of   continuity of a multi-valued function (Extended Abstract)

In this article we treat a notion of continuity for a multi-valued function F and we compute the descriptive set-theoretic complexity of the set of all x for which F is continuous at x. We give conditions under which the latter set is either a G_\delta set or the countable union of G_\delta sets. Also we provide a counterexample which shows that the latter result is optimum under the same conditions. Moreover we prove that those conditions are necessary in order to obtain that the set of points of continuity of F is Borel i.e., we show that if we drop some of the previous conditions then there is a multi-valued function F whose graph is a Borel set and the set of points of continuity of F is not a Borel set. Finally we give some analogue results regarding a stronger notion of continuity for a multi-valued function. This article is motivated by a question of M. Ziegler in “Real Computation with Least Discrete Advice: A Complexity Theory of Nonuniform Computability with Applications to Linear Algebra”, (submitted).


💡 Research Summary

The paper investigates the descriptive set‑theoretic complexity of the set of points at which a multivalued function (F) is continuous. After introducing two notions of continuity—pointwise continuity (simultaneous upper and lower semicontinuity) and strong continuity (every selection of (F) is continuous)—the authors focus on the set
\


📜 Original Paper Content

🚀 Synchronizing high-quality layout from 1TB storage...