Updating a discriminant function on the basis of unclassified data
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4745167
DOI10.1080/03610918208812293zbMath0507.62063OpenAlexW2087501846MaRDI QIDQ4745167
No author found.
Publication date: 1982
Published in: Communications in Statistics - Simulation and Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/03610918208812293
Classification and discrimination; cluster analysis (statistical aspects) (62H30) Monte Carlo methods (65C05)
Related Items
Updating a nonlinear discriminant function estimated from a mixture of two Weibull distributions ⋮ Updating and asymptotic relative efficiency of a nonlinear discriminant function estimated from a mixture of two Gompertz populations ⋮ Updating discriminant functions estimated from inverse gaussian populations ⋮ Effects of unlabeled data on classification error in normal discriminant analysis ⋮ A case-study on naïve labelling for the nearest mean and the linear discriminant classifiers ⋮ Updating a discriminant function on the basis of unclassified data
Cites Work
- A Note on the Generation of Random Normal Deviates
- Estimation Problems with Data from a Mixture
- A comparison of the mixture and classification approaches to cluster analysis
- Some Efficiency Results for the Estimation of the Mixing Proportion in a Mixture of Two Normal Distributions
- 389: Separating Mixtures of Normal Distributions
- Current and past roles of the statistician in space applications
- Concerning several methods for estimating crop acreages using remote sensing data
- Population mixture models and clustering algorithms
- The efficiency of a linear discriminant function based on unclassified initial samples
- Asymptotic behaviour of classification maximum likelihood estimates
- A measure of the agreement between rankings
- A Case Study of two Clustering Methods based on Maximum Likelihood
- Updating a discriminant function on the basis of unclassified data
- Classification and Estimation in Analysis of Variance Problems
- Estimating the components of a mixture of normal distributions