Multidimensional Scaling, Tree-Fitting, and Clustering
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3096028
DOI10.1126/science.210.4468.390zbMath1225.91054OpenAlexW2086220442WikidataQ38501587 ScholiaQ38501587MaRDI QIDQ3096028
Publication date: 5 November 2011
Published in: Science (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.210.4468.390
Clustering in the social and behavioral sciences (91C20) Applications of statistics to psychology (62P15)
Related Items
On the graphical containment of discrete metric spaces, Classification by ordering a (sparse) matrix: A ``simulated annealing approach, A parametric procedure for ultrametric tree estimation from conditional rank order proximity data, The theory and practice of distance geometry, Complex networks: structure and dynamics, How cognitive modeling can benefit from hierarchical Bayesian models, A Bayesian vector multidimensional scaling procedure incorporating dimension reparameterization with variable selection, Psychological relations and psychophysical scales: On the status of direct psychophysical measurement, A theoretical investigation on the attraction effect using the elimination-by-aspects model incorporating higher preference for shared features, Population Coding and the Labeling Problem: Extrinsic Versus Intrinsic Representations, Line search and trust region strategies for canonical decomposition of semi-nonnegative semi-symmetric 3rd order tensors, Accuracy, scope, and flexibility of models, Similarity, kernels, and the triangle inequality, Was Euclid an unnecessarily sophisticated psychologist?, A theory of information structure I. General principles, Statistical consistency and hypothesis testing for nonmetric multidimensional scaling, Nearest neighbor analysis of point processes: Applications to multidimensional scaling, A unifying concept for the amino acid code, General methods of sequence comparison, The probability of collective choice with shared knowledge structures, Principles of information structure common to six levels of the human cognitive system, A Bayesian approach to modeling group and individual differences in multidimensional scaling