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Analyse Discriminante Robuste×Erreurs-types robustes à l'hétéroscédasticité (HC)×
DomaineStatistiqueStatistique
FamilleRegression modelRegression model
Année d'origine19971980
Auteur d'origineHawkins & McLachlan (high-breakdown LDA); Croux & Dehon (S-estimator robust LDA)Eicker; Huber; White (1980); MacKinnon & White (1985)
TypeRobust classification / discriminant analysisRobust covariance estimator for linear regression
Source fondatriceHawkins, D. M. & McLachlan, G. J. (1997). High Breakdown Linear Discriminant Analysis. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 92(437), 136-143. DOI ↗White, H. (1980). A Heteroskedasticity-Consistent Covariance Matrix Estimator and a Direct Test for Heteroskedasticity. Econometrica, 48(4), 817-838. DOI ↗
Aliasrobust LDA, high-breakdown discriminant analysis, MCD-based discriminant analysis, Robust Diskriminant Analizirobust standard errors, White standard errors, Huber-Eicker-White standard errors, sandwich standard errors
Apparentées55
RésuméRobust Discriminant Analysis is a classification method that separates groups with a linear discriminant function while resisting the influence of outliers. It replaces the classical mean and covariance with a high-breakdown estimator such as the Minimum Covariance Determinant (MCD), an approach developed by Hawkins & McLachlan (1997) and Croux & Dehon (2001).Heteroscedasticity-robust standard errors are a correction to the covariance matrix of an OLS regression that yields valid inference when the error variance is not constant. Introduced by Halbert White in 1980 and refined into the finite-sample variants HC1-HC4 by MacKinnon and White in 1985, they leave the coefficient estimates unchanged but rebuild the standard errors so that t and F tests remain trustworthy under heteroscedasticity.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Robust Discriminant Analysis · Heteroscedasticity-Robust Standard Errors. Consulté le 2026-06-18 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare