Although other authors may distinguish them differently (or not at all), Wriggers and Panatiotopoulos (2014) distinguish multivalued functions from set-valued functions (which they called
set-valued relations) by the fact that multivalued functions only take multiple values at finitely (or denumerably) many points, and otherwise behave like a
function. Geometrically, this means that the graph of a multivalued function is necessarily a line of zero area that doesn't loop, while the graph of a set-valued relation may contain solid filled areas or loops. Alternatively, a
multivalued function is a set-valued function that has a further
continuity property, namely that the choice of an element in the set f(x) defines a corresponding element in each set f(y) for close to , and thus defines
locally an ordinary function. == Example ==