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Latest revision as of 10:33, 30 July 2024

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Ideal point discriminant analysis
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    Ideal point discriminant analysis (English)
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    1987
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    A new method of multiple discriminant analysis was developed that allows a mixture of continuous and discrete predictors. The method can be justified under a wide class of distributional assumptions on the predictor variables. The method can also handle three different sampling situations, conditional, joint and separate. In this method both subjects (cases or any other sampling units) and criterion groups are represented as points in a multidimensional euclidean space. The probability of a particular subject belonging to a particular criterion group is stated as a decreasing function of the distance between the corresponding points. A maximum likelihood estimation procedure was developed and implemented in the form of a FORTRAN program. Detailed analysis of two real data sets were reported to demonstrate various advantages of the proposed method. These advantages mostly derive from model evaluation capabilities based on the Akaike information criterion (AIC).
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    ideal point discriminant analysis
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    multiple discriminant analysis
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    mixture of continuous and discrete predictors
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    conditional
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    joint
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    separate
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    maximum likelihood estimation procedure
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    Akaike information criterion
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