Constrained principal component analysis: A comprehensive theory

From MaRDI portal
Publication:5949976

DOI10.1007/s002000100081zbMath1040.62050OpenAlexW2041369703MaRDI QIDQ5949976

Michael A. Hunter, Yoshio Takane

Publication date: 2001

Published in: Applicable Algebra in Engineering, Communication and Computing (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002000100081




Related Items

Matrices with special reference to applications in psychometricsMultilevel dynamic generalized structured component analysis for brain connectivity analysis in functional neuroimaging dataDynamic GSCANO (generalized structured canonical correlation analysis) with applications to the analysis of effective connectivity in functional neuroimaging dataAlternative characterizations of the extended Wedderburn-Guttman theoremPrincipal components along quiver representationsOptimization of Multivariate Inverse Mixing Problems with Application to Neural Metabolite AnalysisA new family of constrained principal component analysis (CPCA)Forecasting emergency medical service call arrival ratesRegularized reduced rank growth curve modelsFunctional multiple-set canonical correlation analysisTests of ignoring and eliminating in nonsymmetric correspondence analysisGeneralized constrained co-inertia analysisAn extended redundancy analysis and its applications to two practical examplesPrincipal component analysis of binary data by iterated singular value decompositionAn improved method for generalized constrained canonical correlation analysisOn ridge operatorsOptimal selection of reduced rank estimators of high-dimensional matricesProfessor Haruo Yanai and multivariate analysisRegularized multiple-set canonical correlation analysisUnnamed ItemOn consistency, natural restrictions and estimability under classical and extended growth curve modelsRegularized linear and kernel redundancy analysisAn empirical comparison of two approaches for CDPCA in high-dimensional dataOn the Wedderburn-Guttman theoremMultilevel dimensionality-reduction methods