Simon Bridge said:
Note: the "sign" associated with a number or a vector is a + or a - ... the colon is not usually considered a "sign" so your question is about "notation".
People use whatever notation takes their fancy in papers - there are lots of conventions surrounding colons and other punctuation marks in notation. Without the specific context in which it is used we can only guess.
What do you mean by "entry"? Is the entry into a spreadsheet and the vector is the cell location? Perhaps you mean that the "vector" is an operator and the "entry" is an operand?
Can you write out the use for us in more detail?
Anyway - it looks like this involves the input-output model in economics...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Input-output_model
... is that correct?
In the text, it said "Under the sign convention on the input–output vector" as well as "We adopt the usual sign convention for the vector b", and it has a vector, let's name it b, which has its members labeled x1, x2, xn, etc (the subscript notation is used for 1, 2, n, etc).
It said that 'we adopt the usual sign convention for the vector b', and the ":" notation was used as follows:
b:xn < 0
From what I understand, the notation serves to select a given entry (as in, member) from the vector, since it mentioned that if the value is negative, then the firm is a net user of the product in question, and since b is a production vector (which has net quantities of each product a firm uses/produces).
After assuming that this was the case, everything made sense. However, I have no idea what "sign convention" means. Removing the term doesn't seem to change the meaning, though.
Simon Bridge said:
Anyway - it looks like this involves the input-output model in economics...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Input-output_model
... is that correct?
And it's not exactly the Leontief input-output model. The vector is a part of the First Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics. This vector is simply a net production vector - negative values imply that the firm inputs more of the product in question than it outputs. It doesn't exactly specify the inputs needed for each output, or for the aggregate output.