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Ordered Bell number

In number theory and enumerative combinatorics, the ordered Bell numbers or Fubini numbers count the number of weak orderings on a set of elements. Weak orderings arrange their elements into a sequence allowing ties, such as might arise as the outcome of a horse race).[1][2] Starting from , these numbers are

The 13 possible strict weak orderings on a set of three elements {a, b, c}
1, 1, 3, 13, 75, 541, 4683, 47293, 545835, 7087261, 102247563, ... (sequence A000670 in the OEIS).

The ordered Bell numbers may be computed via a summation formula involving binomial coefficients, or by using a recurrence relation. Along with the weak orderings, they count several other types of combinatorial objects that have a bijective correspondence to the weak orderings, such as the ordered multiplicative partitions of a squarefree number[3] or the faces of all dimensions of a permutohedron.[4]

History edit

 
13 plane trees with ordered leaves and equal-length root-leaf paths, with the gaps between adjacent leaves labeled by the height above the leaves of the nearest common ancestor. These labels induce a weak ordering on the gaps, showing that the trees of this type are counted by the ordered Bell numbers.

The ordered Bell numbers appear in the work of Cayley (1859), who used them to count certain plane trees with   totally ordered leaves. In the trees considered by Cayley, each root-to-leaf path has the same length, and the number of nodes at distance   from the root must be strictly smaller than the number of nodes at distance  , until reaching the leaves.[5] In such a tree, there are   pairs of adjacent leaves, that may be weakly ordered by the height of their lowest common ancestor; this weak ordering determines the tree. Mor & Fraenkel (1984) call the trees of this type "Cayley trees", and they call the sequences that may be used to label their gaps (sequences of   positive integers that include at least one copy of each positive integer between one and the maximum value in the sequence) "Cayley permutations".[6]

Pippenger (2010) traces the problem of counting weak orderings, which has the same sequence as its solution, to the work of Whitworth (1886).[7][8] These numbers were called Fubini numbers by Louis Comtet, because they count the number of different ways to rearrange the ordering of sums or integrals in Fubini's theorem, which in turn is named after Guido Fubini.[9] The Bell numbers, named after Eric Temple Bell, count the number of partitions of a set, and the weak orderings that are counted by the ordered Bell numbers may be interpreted as a partition together with a total order on the sets in the partition.[10]

Formulas edit

Summation edit

The  th ordered Bell number may be given by a summation formula involving the Stirling numbers of the second kind, which count the number of partitions of an  -element set into   nonempty subsets. A weak ordering may be described as a permutation of the subsets in this partition, and so the ordered Bell numbers (the number of weak orderings) may be calculated by summing these numbers, multiplied by a factorial,  , that counts the number of these permutations: [11][12]

 
An alternative interpretation of the terms of this sum is that they count the features of each dimension in a permutohedron of dimension  , with the  th term counting the features of dimension  . For instance, the three-dimensional permutohedron, the truncated octahedron, has one volume ( ), 14 two-dimensional faces ( ), 36 edges ( ), and 24 vertices ( ). The total number of these faces is 1 + 14 + 36 + 24 = 75, an ordered Bell number, corresponding to the summation formula above for  .[13]

The same summation may be expanded out into a double summation involving binomial coefficients (using a formula expressing Stirling numbers as a sum of binomial coefficients), or given by an infinite series:[7][10]

 

Another summation formula expresses the ordered Bell numbers in terms of the Eulerian numbers, which count the number of permutations of   items with   runs of increasing items:[14]

 
where   is the  th Eulerian polynomial.[14]

Generating function and approximation edit

The exponential generating function of the ordered Bell numbers is[7][10][12][15]

 
The form of this function corresponds to the fact that the ordered Bell numbers are the numbers in the first column of the infinite matrix  , where   is the identity matrix and   is an infinite matrix form of Pascal's triangle.[16] Based on a contour integration of this generating function, the ordered Bell numbers can be expressed by the infinite sum[3][17]
 
and approximated (by keeping only the   term of the sum) as[3][12][18][19][17]
 

Recurrence and modular periodicity edit

As well as the formulae above, the ordered Bell numbers may be calculated by the recurrence relation[7][18]

 

The intuitive meaning of this formula is that a weak ordering on   items may be broken down into a choice of some nonempty set of   items that go into the first equivalence class of the ordering, together with a smaller weak ordering on the remaining   items. As a base case for the recurrence,   (there is one weak ordering on zero items). Based on this recurrence, these numbers can be shown to obey certain periodic patterns in modular arithmetic: for sufficiently large  ,

 [18]
 
  and
 [20]

Several additional modular identities are given by Good (1975) and Poonen (1988).[11][21]

Additional applications edit

As has already been mentioned, the ordered Bell numbers count weak orderings, permutohedron faces, Cayley trees, Cayley permutations, ordered multiplicative partitions of squarefree numbers, and equivalent formulae in Fubini's theorem. Weak orderings in turn have many other applications. For instance, in horse racing, photo finishes have eliminated most but not all ties, called in this context dead heats, and the outcome of a race that may contain ties (including all the horses, not just the first three finishers) may be described using a weak ordering. For this reason, the ordered Bell numbers count the possible number of outcomes of a horse race,[1] or the possible outcomes of a multi-candidate election.[22] In contrast, when items are ordered or ranked in a way that does not allow ties (such as occurs with the ordering of cards in a deck of cards, or batting orders among baseball players), the number of orderings for   items is a factorial number  ,[23] which is significantly smaller than the corresponding ordered Bell number.[24]

Kemeny (1956) uses the ordered Bell numbers to describe the "complexity" of an n-ary relation, by which he means the number of other relations one can form from it by permuting and repeating its arguments (lowering the arity with every repetition). In this application, for each derived relation, the arguments of the original relation are weakly ordered by the positions of the corresponding arguments of the derived relation.[25]

Velleman & Call (1995) consider combination locks with a numeric keypad, in which several keys may be pressed simultaneously and a combination consists of a sequence of keypresses that includes each key exactly once. As they show, the number of different combinations in such a system is given by the ordered Bell numbers.[14]

Ellison & Klein (2001) point out an application of these numbers to optimality theory in linguistics. In this theory, grammars for natural languages are constructed by ranking certain constraints, and (in a phenomenon called factorial typology) the number of different grammars that can be formed in this way is limited to the number of permutations of the constraints. A paper reviewed by Ellison and Klein suggested an extension of this linguistic model in which ties between constraints are allowed, so that the ranking of constraints becomes a weak order rather than a total order. As they point out, the much larger magnitude of the ordered Bell numbers, relative to the corresponding factorials, allows this theory to generate a much richer set of grammars.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b de Koninck, J. M. (2009), Those Fascinating Numbers, American Mathematical Society, p. 4, ISBN 9780821886311. Because of this application, de Koninck calls these numbers "horse numbers", but this name does not appear to be in widespread use.
  2. ^ Mendelson, Elliott (1982), "Races with ties", Mathematics Magazine, 55 (3): 170–175, doi:10.2307/2690085, JSTOR 2690085, MR 0653432
  3. ^ a b c Sklar, Abe (1952), "On the factorization of squarefree integers", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 3 (5): 701–705, doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1952-0050620-1, JSTOR 2032169, MR 0050620
  4. ^ Ziegler, Günter M. (1995), Lectures on Polytopes, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 152, Springer, p. 18
  5. ^ Cayley, A. (1859), "On the analytical forms called trees, second part", Philosophical Magazine, Series IV, 18 (121): 374–378, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511703706.026, ISBN 9781108004961, in Collected Works of Arthur Cayley, p. 113
  6. ^ Mor, M.; Fraenkel, A. S. (1984), "Cayley permutations", Discrete Mathematics, 48 (1): 101–112, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(84)90136-5, MR 0732206
  7. ^ a b c d Pippenger, Nicholas (2010), "The hypercube of resistors, asymptotic expansions, and preferential arrangements", Mathematics Magazine, 83 (5): 331–346, arXiv:0904.1757, doi:10.4169/002557010X529752, MR 2762645, S2CID 17260512
  8. ^ Whitworth, W. A. (1886), Choice and Chance, Deighton: Bell and Co., Proposition XXII, p. 93, as cited by Pippenger (2010)
  9. ^ Comtet, Louis (1974), (PDF) (revised and enlarged ed.), D. Reidel Publishing Co., p. 228, archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-04, retrieved 2013-03-12
  10. ^ a b c Knopfmacher, A.; Mays, M. E. (2005), "A survey of factorization counting functions", International Journal of Number Theory, 1 (4): 563–581, doi:10.1142/S1793042105000315, MR 2196796
  11. ^ a b Good, I. J. (1975), "The number of orderings of n candidates when ties are permitted" (PDF), Fibonacci Quarterly, 13: 11–18, MR 0376367
  12. ^ a b c Sprugnoli, Renzo (1994), "Riordan arrays and combinatorial sums", Discrete Mathematics, 132 (1–3): 267–290, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(92)00570-H, hdl:10338.dmlcz/143149, MR 1297386
  13. ^ 1, 14, 36, 24 is the fourth row of this triangle: see Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.), "Sequence A019538", The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, OEIS Foundation
  14. ^ a b c Velleman, Daniel J.; Call, Gregory S. (1995), "Permutations and combination locks", Mathematics Magazine, 68 (4): 243–253, doi:10.2307/2690567, JSTOR 2690567, MR 1363707
  15. ^ Getu, Seyoum; Shapiro, Louis W.; Woan, Wen Jin; Woodson, Leon C. (1992), "How to guess a generating function", SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics, 5 (4): 497–499, doi:10.1137/0405040, MR 1186818
  16. ^ Lewis, Barry (2010), "Revisiting the Pascal matrix", American Mathematical Monthly, 117 (1): 50–66, doi:10.4169/000298910X474989, MR 2599467, S2CID 207520945
  17. ^ a b Bailey, Ralph W. (1998), "The number of weak orderings of a finite set", Social Choice and Welfare, 15 (4): 559–562, doi:10.1007/s003550050123, MR 1647055, S2CID 120845059
  18. ^ a b c Gross, O. A. (1962), "Preferential arrangements", The American Mathematical Monthly, 69 (1): 4–8, doi:10.2307/2312725, JSTOR 2312725, MR 0130837
  19. ^ Barthélémy, J.-P. (1980), "An asymptotic equivalent for the number of total preorders on a finite set", Discrete Mathematics, 29 (3): 311–313, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(80)90159-4, MR 0560774
  20. ^ Kauffman, Dolores H. (1963), "Note on preferential arrangements", The American Mathematical Monthly, 70 (1): 62, doi:10.2307/2312790, JSTOR 2312790, MR 0144827.
  21. ^ Poonen, Bjorn (1988), "Periodicity of a combinatorial sequence", Fibonacci Quarterly, 26 (1): 70–76, MR 0931425
  22. ^ Petković, Miodrag (2009), Famous Puzzles of Great Mathematicians, American Mathematical Society, p. 194, ISBN 9780821886304
  23. ^ Harris, John; Hirst, Jeffry L.; Mossinghoff, Michael J. (2008), Combinatorics and Graph Theory, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics (2nd ed.), Springer, p. 132, ISBN 9780387797106
  24. ^ a b Ellison, T. Mark; Klein, Ewan (2001), "Review: The Best of All Possible Words (review of Optimality Theory: An Overview, Archangeli, Diana & Langendoen, D. Terence, eds., Blackwell, 1997)", Journal of Linguistics, 37 (1): 127–143, JSTOR 4176645
  25. ^ Kemeny, John G. (1956), "Two measures of complexity", The Journal of Philosophy, 52 (24): 722–733, doi:10.2307/2022697, JSTOR 2022697

ordered, bell, number, number, theory, enumerative, combinatorics, ordered, bell, numbers, fubini, numbers, count, number, weak, orderings, displaystyle, elements, weak, orderings, arrange, their, elements, into, sequence, allowing, ties, such, might, arise, o. In number theory and enumerative combinatorics the ordered Bell numbers or Fubini numbers count the number of weak orderings on a set of n displaystyle n elements Weak orderings arrange their elements into a sequence allowing ties such as might arise as the outcome of a horse race 1 2 Starting from n 0 displaystyle n 0 these numbers areThe 13 possible strict weak orderings on a set of three elements a b c 1 1 3 13 75 541 4683 47293 545835 7087261 102247563 sequence A000670 in the OEIS The ordered Bell numbers may be computed via a summation formula involving binomial coefficients or by using a recurrence relation Along with the weak orderings they count several other types of combinatorial objects that have a bijective correspondence to the weak orderings such as the ordered multiplicative partitions of a squarefree number 3 or the faces of all dimensions of a permutohedron 4 Contents 1 History 2 Formulas 2 1 Summation 2 2 Generating function and approximation 2 3 Recurrence and modular periodicity 3 Additional applications 4 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp 13 plane trees with ordered leaves and equal length root leaf paths with the gaps between adjacent leaves labeled by the height above the leaves of the nearest common ancestor These labels induce a weak ordering on the gaps showing that the trees of this type are counted by the ordered Bell numbers The ordered Bell numbers appear in the work of Cayley 1859 who used them to count certain plane trees with n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp totally ordered leaves In the trees considered by Cayley each root to leaf path has the same length and the number of nodes at distance i displaystyle i nbsp from the root must be strictly smaller than the number of nodes at distance i 1 displaystyle i 1 nbsp until reaching the leaves 5 In such a tree there are n displaystyle n nbsp pairs of adjacent leaves that may be weakly ordered by the height of their lowest common ancestor this weak ordering determines the tree Mor amp Fraenkel 1984 call the trees of this type Cayley trees and they call the sequences that may be used to label their gaps sequences of n displaystyle n nbsp positive integers that include at least one copy of each positive integer between one and the maximum value in the sequence Cayley permutations 6 Pippenger 2010 traces the problem of counting weak orderings which has the same sequence as its solution to the work of Whitworth 1886 7 8 These numbers were called Fubini numbers by Louis Comtet because they count the number of different ways to rearrange the ordering of sums or integrals in Fubini s theorem which in turn is named after Guido Fubini 9 The Bell numbers named after Eric Temple Bell count the number of partitions of a set and the weak orderings that are counted by the ordered Bell numbers may be interpreted as a partition together with a total order on the sets in the partition 10 Formulas editSummation edit The n displaystyle n nbsp th ordered Bell number may be given by a summation formula involving the Stirling numbers of the second kind which count the number of partitions of an n displaystyle n nbsp element set into k displaystyle k nbsp nonempty subsets A weak ordering may be described as a permutation of the subsets in this partition and so the ordered Bell numbers the number of weak orderings may be calculated by summing these numbers multiplied by a factorial k displaystyle k nbsp that counts the number of these permutations 11 12 a n k 0 n k n k displaystyle a n sum k 0 n k left begin matrix n k end matrix right nbsp An alternative interpretation of the terms of this sum is that they count the features of each dimension in a permutohedron of dimension n displaystyle n nbsp with the k displaystyle k nbsp th term counting the features of dimension n k displaystyle n k nbsp For instance the three dimensional permutohedron the truncated octahedron has one volume k 0 displaystyle k 0 nbsp 14 two dimensional faces k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp 36 edges k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp and 24 vertices k 3 displaystyle k 3 nbsp The total number of these faces is 1 14 36 24 75 an ordered Bell number corresponding to the summation formula above for n 3 displaystyle n 3 nbsp 13 The same summation may be expanded out into a double summation involving binomial coefficients using a formula expressing Stirling numbers as a sum of binomial coefficients or given by an infinite series 7 10 a n k 0 n j 0 k 1 k j k j j n 1 2 m 0 m n 2 m displaystyle a n sum k 0 n sum j 0 k 1 k j binom k j j n frac 1 2 sum m 0 infty frac m n 2 m nbsp Another summation formula expresses the ordered Bell numbers in terms of the Eulerian numbers which count the number of permutations of n displaystyle n nbsp items with k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp runs of increasing items 14 a n k 0 n 1 2 k n k A n 2 displaystyle a n sum k 0 n 1 2 k left langle begin matrix n k end matrix right rangle A n 2 nbsp where A n displaystyle A n nbsp is the n displaystyle n nbsp th Eulerian polynomial 14 Generating function and approximation edit The exponential generating function of the ordered Bell numbers is 7 10 12 15 n 0 a n x n n 1 2 e x displaystyle sum n 0 infty a n frac x n n frac 1 2 e x nbsp The form of this function corresponds to the fact that the ordered Bell numbers are the numbers in the first column of the infinite matrix 2 I P 1 displaystyle 2I P 1 nbsp where I displaystyle I nbsp is the identity matrix and P displaystyle P nbsp is an infinite matrix form of Pascal s triangle 16 Based on a contour integration of this generating function the ordered Bell numbers can be expressed by the infinite sum 3 17 a n n 2 k log 2 2 p i k n 1 n 1 displaystyle a n frac n 2 sum k infty infty log 2 2 pi ik n 1 qquad n geq 1 nbsp and approximated by keeping only the k 0 displaystyle k 0 nbsp term of the sum as 3 12 18 19 17 a n n 2 log 2 n 1 displaystyle a n approx frac n 2 log 2 n 1 nbsp Recurrence and modular periodicity edit As well as the formulae above the ordered Bell numbers may be calculated by the recurrence relation 7 18 a n i 1 n n i a n i displaystyle a n sum i 1 n binom n i a n i nbsp The intuitive meaning of this formula is that a weak ordering on n displaystyle n nbsp items may be broken down into a choice of some nonempty set of i displaystyle i nbsp items that go into the first equivalence class of the ordering together with a smaller weak ordering on the remaining n i displaystyle n i nbsp items As a base case for the recurrence a 0 1 displaystyle a 0 1 nbsp there is one weak ordering on zero items Based on this recurrence these numbers can be shown to obey certain periodic patterns in modular arithmetic for sufficiently large n displaystyle n nbsp a n 4 a n mod 10 displaystyle a n 4 equiv a n pmod 10 nbsp 18 a n 20 a n mod 100 displaystyle a n 20 equiv a n pmod 100 nbsp a n 100 a n mod 1000 displaystyle a n 100 equiv a n pmod 1000 nbsp and a n 500 a n mod 10000 displaystyle a n 500 equiv a n pmod 10000 nbsp 20 Several additional modular identities are given by Good 1975 and Poonen 1988 11 21 Additional applications editAs has already been mentioned the ordered Bell numbers count weak orderings permutohedron faces Cayley trees Cayley permutations ordered multiplicative partitions of squarefree numbers and equivalent formulae in Fubini s theorem Weak orderings in turn have many other applications For instance in horse racing photo finishes have eliminated most but not all ties called in this context dead heats and the outcome of a race that may contain ties including all the horses not just the first three finishers may be described using a weak ordering For this reason the ordered Bell numbers count the possible number of outcomes of a horse race 1 or the possible outcomes of a multi candidate election 22 In contrast when items are ordered or ranked in a way that does not allow ties such as occurs with the ordering of cards in a deck of cards or batting orders among baseball players the number of orderings for n displaystyle n nbsp items is a factorial number n displaystyle n nbsp 23 which is significantly smaller than the corresponding ordered Bell number 24 Kemeny 1956 uses the ordered Bell numbers to describe the complexity of an n ary relation by which he means the number of other relations one can form from it by permuting and repeating its arguments lowering the arity with every repetition In this application for each derived relation the arguments of the original relation are weakly ordered by the positions of the corresponding arguments of the derived relation 25 Velleman amp Call 1995 consider combination locks with a numeric keypad in which several keys may be pressed simultaneously and a combination consists of a sequence of keypresses that includes each key exactly once As they show the number of different combinations in such a system is given by the ordered Bell numbers 14 Ellison amp Klein 2001 point out an application of these numbers to optimality theory in linguistics In this theory grammars for natural languages are constructed by ranking certain constraints and in a phenomenon called factorial typology the number of different grammars that can be formed in this way is limited to the number of permutations of the constraints A paper reviewed by Ellison and Klein suggested an extension of this linguistic model in which ties between constraints are allowed so that the ranking of constraints becomes a weak order rather than a total order As they point out the much larger magnitude of the ordered Bell numbers relative to the corresponding factorials allows this theory to generate a much richer set of grammars 24 References edit a b de Koninck J M 2009 Those Fascinating Numbers American Mathematical Society p 4 ISBN 9780821886311 Because of this application de Koninck calls these numbers horse numbers but this name does not appear to be in widespread use Mendelson Elliott 1982 Races with ties Mathematics Magazine 55 3 170 175 doi 10 2307 2690085 JSTOR 2690085 MR 0653432 a b c Sklar Abe 1952 On the factorization of squarefree integers Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 3 5 701 705 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 1952 0050620 1 JSTOR 2032169 MR 0050620 Ziegler Gunter M 1995 Lectures on Polytopes Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 152 Springer p 18 Cayley A 1859 On the analytical forms called trees second part Philosophical Magazine Series IV 18 121 374 378 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511703706 026 ISBN 9781108004961 in Collected Works of Arthur Cayley p 113 Mor M Fraenkel A S 1984 Cayley permutations Discrete Mathematics 48 1 101 112 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 84 90136 5 MR 0732206 a b c d Pippenger Nicholas 2010 The hypercube of resistors asymptotic expansions and preferential arrangements Mathematics Magazine 83 5 331 346 arXiv 0904 1757 doi 10 4169 002557010X529752 MR 2762645 S2CID 17260512 Whitworth W A 1886 Choice and Chance Deighton Bell and Co Proposition XXII p 93 as cited by Pippenger 2010 Comtet Louis 1974 Advanced Combinatorics The Art of Finite and Infinite Expansions PDF revised and enlarged ed D Reidel Publishing Co p 228 archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 04 retrieved 2013 03 12 a b c Knopfmacher A Mays M E 2005 A survey of factorization counting functions International Journal of Number Theory 1 4 563 581 doi 10 1142 S1793042105000315 MR 2196796 a b Good I J 1975 The number of orderings of n candidates when ties are permitted PDF Fibonacci Quarterly 13 11 18 MR 0376367 a b c Sprugnoli Renzo 1994 Riordan arrays and combinatorial sums Discrete Mathematics 132 1 3 267 290 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 92 00570 H hdl 10338 dmlcz 143149 MR 1297386 1 14 36 24 is the fourth row of this triangle see Sloane N J A ed Sequence A019538 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation a b c Velleman Daniel J Call Gregory S 1995 Permutations and combination locks Mathematics Magazine 68 4 243 253 doi 10 2307 2690567 JSTOR 2690567 MR 1363707 Getu Seyoum Shapiro Louis W Woan Wen Jin Woodson Leon C 1992 How to guess a generating function SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics 5 4 497 499 doi 10 1137 0405040 MR 1186818 Lewis Barry 2010 Revisiting the Pascal matrix American Mathematical Monthly 117 1 50 66 doi 10 4169 000298910X474989 MR 2599467 S2CID 207520945 a b Bailey Ralph W 1998 The number of weak orderings of a finite set Social Choice and Welfare 15 4 559 562 doi 10 1007 s003550050123 MR 1647055 S2CID 120845059 a b c Gross O A 1962 Preferential arrangements The American Mathematical Monthly 69 1 4 8 doi 10 2307 2312725 JSTOR 2312725 MR 0130837 Barthelemy J P 1980 An asymptotic equivalent for the number of total preorders on a finite set Discrete Mathematics 29 3 311 313 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 80 90159 4 MR 0560774 Kauffman Dolores H 1963 Note on preferential arrangements The American Mathematical Monthly 70 1 62 doi 10 2307 2312790 JSTOR 2312790 MR 0144827 Poonen Bjorn 1988 Periodicity of a combinatorial sequence Fibonacci Quarterly 26 1 70 76 MR 0931425 Petkovic Miodrag 2009 Famous Puzzles of Great Mathematicians American Mathematical Society p 194 ISBN 9780821886304 Harris John Hirst Jeffry L Mossinghoff Michael J 2008 Combinatorics and Graph Theory Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics 2nd ed Springer p 132 ISBN 9780387797106 a b Ellison T Mark Klein Ewan 2001 Review The Best of All Possible Words review of Optimality Theory An Overview Archangeli Diana amp Langendoen D Terence eds Blackwell 1997 Journal of Linguistics 37 1 127 143 JSTOR 4176645 Kemeny John G 1956 Two measures of complexity The Journal of Philosophy 52 24 722 733 doi 10 2307 2022697 JSTOR 2022697 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ordered Bell number amp oldid 1187506353, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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