Probabilistic multidimensional scaling: An anisotropic model for distance judgments
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1117870
DOI10.1016/0022-2496(89)90030-8zbMath0667.92022OpenAlexW2016584946MaRDI QIDQ1117870
Publication date: 1989
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Psychology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-2496(89)90030-8
anisotropic modelscomparative judgmentsdeterministic modelsMaximum likelihood estimatesdistance judgmentsprobabilistic multidimensional scaling model
Related Items
Supporting complex group decisions: A probabilistic multi-dimensional scaling approach ⋮ Probabilistic psychophysics with noisy stimuli ⋮ Internal multidimensional unfolding about a single-ideal -- a probabilistic solution ⋮ A Thurstonian view of the analytic hierarchy process ⋮ Probabilistic multidimensional scaling using a city-block metric
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On the projections of isotropic distributions
- Distribution of multivariate quadratic forms under certain covariance structures
- Spatial Statistics: Developments 1980-3, Correspondent Paper
- Distribution of Quadratic Forms and Some Applications
- The Distribution of Quadratic Forms in Normal Variates: A Small Sample Theory with Applications to Spectral Analysis
- Comment: Distribution of Quadratic Forms in Normal Random Variables—Evaluation by Numerical Integration
- Algorithm AS 155: The Distribution of a Linear Combination of χ 2 Random Variables
- Distribution of Quadratic Forms in Normal Random Variables—Evaluation by Numerical Integration
- Computing the distribution of quadratic forms in normal variables
- A Gaussian Approximation to the Distribution of a Definite Quadratic Fo
- Probability Content of Regions Under Spherical Normal Distributions, IV: The Distribution of Homogeneous and Non-Homogeneous Quadratic Functions of Normal Variables
This page was built for publication: Probabilistic multidimensional scaling: An anisotropic model for distance judgments