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Biplot: Gelijktijdige weergave van rijen en kolommen in multivariate data×Correspondence Analysis×Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA)×
VakgebiedStatistiekStatistiekStatistiek
FamilieLatent structureLatent structureLatent structure
Jaar van ontstaan197119842006
GrondleggerRuben GabrielJean-Paul Benzécri; Michael GreenacreGreenacre & Blasius
TypeMultivariate graphical displayExploratory multivariate technique for categorical dataMultivariate exploratory ordination
Oorspronkelijke bronGabriel, K. R. (1971). The biplot graphic display of matrices with application to principal component analysis. Biometrika, 58(3), 453–467. DOI ↗Greenacre, M. J. (1984). Theory and Applications of Correspondence Analysis. Academic Press. ISBN: 978-0-12-299050-2Greenacre, M., & Blasius, J. (Eds.). (2006). Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Related Methods. Chapman & Hall/CRC. ISBN: 978-1-58488-628-0
AliassenGabriel biplot, PCA biplot, JK biplot, Çift grafikCA, Simple Correspondence Analysis, Reciprocal Averaging, Karşılıklı Uyum AnaliziMCA, Homogeneity Analysis, Multiple Nominal Component Analysis, Çoklu Uyum Analizi
Verwant222
SamenvattingA biplot is a low-dimensional graphical representation of a multivariate data matrix that simultaneously displays both the observations (rows) and the variables (columns) as points or vectors in the same plot. Introduced by Ruben Gabriel in 1971, the technique decomposes the data matrix into a rank-2 approximation using singular value decomposition, allowing the approximate value of any data entry to be read as the inner product of the corresponding row and column markers.Correspondence Analysis (CA) is an exploratory multivariate technique for visualizing the association structure of a two-way contingency table. Developed systematically by Jean-Paul Benzécri in France during the 1960s–1970s and brought to an English-language audience by Michael Greenacre in 1984, CA decomposes the chi-square statistic of a cross-tabulation to produce a low-dimensional joint display — called a biplot — in which rows and columns are represented as points whose proximities reflect their associations.Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA) is a multivariate ordination technique designed to explore and visualize associations among three or more categorical variables simultaneously. By mapping both observations and variable categories onto a shared low-dimensional space, MCA reveals hidden structure in nominal or ordinal survey data. The method was comprehensively systematized and extended by Michael Greenacre and Jorg Blasius in their 2006 edited volume, building on earlier geometric data analysis traditions developed in France by Jean-Paul Benzecri during the 1960s and 1970s.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergelijken: Biplot · Correspondence Analysis · Multiple Correspondence Analysis. Geraadpleegd op 2026-06-15 via https://scholargate.app/nl/compare