Mixtures of Continuous and Categorical Variables in Discriminant Analysis: A Hypothesis-Testing Approach

From MaRDI portal
Publication:3326639


DOI10.2307/2529879zbMath0539.62069MaRDI QIDQ3326639

Wojtek Janusz Krzanowski

Publication date: 1982

Published in: Biometrics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2529879


62H30: Classification and discrimination; cluster analysis (statistical aspects)


Related Items

PERFORMANCE OF THE LOCATION LINEAR DISCRIMINANT FUNCTION UNDER ACROSS-LOCATION HETEROSCEDASTICITY, Survival analysis with long-term survivors and partially observed covariates, Fitting the log‐F Accelerated Failure Time Model with Incomplete Covariate Data, Classification of dichotomous and continuous variables with incomplete samples, On discrimination procedure with mixtures of continuous and categorical variables, Distance Metrics and Clustering Methods for Mixed‐type Data, Selection of variables, and assessment of their performance, in mixed-variable discriminant analysis, Maximum likelihood estimation for linear regression models with right censored outcomes and missing predictors., Quadratic location discriminant functions for mixed categorical and continuous data, A bootstrap generalized likelihood ratio test in discriminant analysis, Error rates for classifying observations based on binary and continuous variables with covariates, The location linear discriminant for classifying observations with unequal variances, The location model for mixtures of categorical and continuous variables, The effect of across-location heteroscedasticity on the classification of mixed categorical and continuous data, General location model with factor analyzer covariance matrix structure and its applications, A Classification Method for Directional Data with Application to the Human Skull, Multiple discriminant analysis in the presence of mixed continuous and categorical data, On the estimation of the expected probability of misclassification in discriminant analysis with mixed binary and continuous variables