Robust Mixture Modeling
Robust mixture modeling fits finite mixture models — probabilistic clustering methods that assume data arise from a blend of underlying subpopulations — using component distributions or estimation strategies designed to be insensitive to outliers and heavy-tailed noise. The two dominant approaches replace Gaussian components with heavier-tailed distributions such as the multivariate t, or trim a fixed proportion of the most extreme observations before fitting.
Source record
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- Garcia-Escudero, L. A., Gordaliza, A., Matran, C. & Mayo-Iscar, A. (2008). A general trimming approach to robust cluster analysis. Annals of Statistics, 36(3), 1324–1345. · DOI 10.1214/07-AOS515
- Peel, D. & McLachlan, G. J. (2000). Robust mixture modelling using the t distribution. Statistics and Computing, 10(4), 339–348. · DOI 10.1023/A:1008981510081
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