Sperner's Theorem and a Problem of ErdÅ's, Katona and Kleitman

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Abstract

A central result in extremal set theory is the celebrated theorem of Sperner from 1928, which gives the size of the largest family of subsets of [n] not containing a 2-chain, F1 ⊂ F2. ErdÅ's extended this theorem to determine the largest family without a k-chain, F1 F2. Fk. ErdÅ's and Katona, followed by Kleitman, asked how many chains must appear in families with sizes larger than the corresponding extremal bounds. In 1966, Kleitman resolved this question for 2-chains, showing that the number of such chains is minimized by taking sets as close to the middle level as possible. Moreover, he conjectured the extremal families were the same for k-chains, for all k. In this paper, making the first progress on this problem, we verify Kleitman's conjecture for the families whose size is at most the size of the k + 1 middle levels. We also characterize all extremal configurations.

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Das, S., Gan, W., & Sudakov, B. (2015). Sperner’s Theorem and a Problem of ErdÅ’s, Katona and Kleitman. Combinatorics Probability and Computing, 24(4), 585–608. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963548314000273

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