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Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.

Analiza factorială×Diagnosticile de influență (Distanța Cook, DFFITS, Leveraj)×Analiza Componentelor Principale×
DomeniuStatistică pentru cercetareStatisticăÎnvățare automată
FamilieProcess / pipelineRegression modelMachine learning
Anul apariției193119772002
Autorul originalLouis Leon ThurstoneR. Dennis Cook (Cook's distance); Belsley, Kuh & Welsch (DFFITS, leverage)Jolliffe, I.T. (textbook); Pearson & Hotelling (origins)
TipMethodRegression diagnosticUnsupervised dimensionality reduction
Sursa seminalăThurstone, L. L. (1947). Multiple Factor Analysis. University of Chicago Press. DOI ↗Cook, R. D. (1977). Detection of Influential Observations in Linear Regression. Technometrics, 19(1), 15-18. DOI ↗Jolliffe, I.T. (2002). Principal Component Analysis (2nd ed.). Springer. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativeEFA, CFA, latent variable modelingCook's distance, DFFITS, leverage, influential observation detectionTemel Bileşenler Analizi (PCA), PCA, principal components analysis, Karhunen-Loève transform
Înrudite353
RezumatFactor analysis is a statistical technique for identifying latent (unobserved) dimensions underlying observed variables, developed by Louis Leon Thurstone in the 1930s and formalized by Jöreskog (1969). Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) discovers unknown factor structure from data; confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) tests hypothesized relationships between observed and latent variables. Essential in psychometrics (test development), organizational research (measuring constructs like leadership style), and biomedicine (identifying disease subtypes), factor analysis reduces dimensionality while revealing conceptual organization in multivariate data.Influence diagnostics are a family of post-fit measures that quantify how much each single observation affects a fitted regression. Cook's distance was introduced by R. Dennis Cook in 1977, with leverage and DFFITS formalised by Belsley, Kuh and Welsch in 1980, to flag the observations that most strongly pull the estimated coefficients.Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is an unsupervised dimensionality-reduction method — given its modern textbook treatment by Ian Jolliffe (2002) — that compresses high-dimensional data into fewer dimensions while preserving the maximum possible variance. It re-expresses correlated variables as a small set of uncorrelated principal components ordered by how much of the data's variation each one captures.
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ScholarGateCompară metode: Factor Analysis · Influence Diagnostics · Principal Component Analysis. Preluat la 2026-06-18 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare