In elementary treatments of quantum mechanics, we are taught that the wavefunction of a single particle is complex valued ($\Psi : \mathbb{R}^3 \to \mathbb{C}$). In particular, the wavefunction has a definite phase at each point (up to a global phase redefinition).
However, I have also seen references (see the quote from the Dirac paper in the footnote below) to the idea that it is only path-dependent phase differences between points that are well-defined. That is, $\Psi$ is actually to be viewed as a section of a bundle of $\mathbb{C}$ over $\mathbb{R}^3$. The wikipedia article on the Aharonov-Bohm effect refers to this idea (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aharonov%E2%80%93Bohm_effect#Mathematical_interpretation), but I can't tell if it's something physically new.
$\bf{Question:}$ Are there physical consequences to $\Psi$ being a section instead of a regular function, or is it just a mathematical convenience? In other words, is there any measured phenomena (so, exclude magnetic monopoles) that forces us to view $\Psi$ as a section?
$\bf{Footnote:}$ "We may assume that $\gamma$ [the phase of the wavefunction] has no definite value at a particular point, but only a definite difference in values for any two points. [...] For two distant points there will be then be a definite phase difference only relative to some curve joining them and different curves will in general give different phase differences." -Dirac's 1931 paper (http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/133/821/60)
EDIT: Another paper that refers to this idea is R. Jackiw's "(Constrained) Quantization Without Tears" (http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9306075). The magnetic vector potential $a_i$ in nonrelativistic quantum mechanics (see equation 16(b)) is referred to as a connection one-form in the appendix.