เปรียบเทียบวิธี
ดูวิธีที่เลือกเทียบกันแบบเคียงข้าง แถวที่ต่างกันจะถูกเน้นไว้
| Factor Analysis× | การวิเคราะห์องค์ประกอบหลัก× | Random Forest× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| สาขาวิชา≠ | สถิติการวิจัย | การเรียนรู้ของเครื่อง | การเรียนรู้ของเครื่อง |
| ตระกูล≠ | Process / pipeline | Machine learning | Machine learning |
| ปีกำเนิด≠ | 1931 | 2002 | 2001 |
| ผู้ริเริ่ม≠ | Louis Leon Thurstone | Jolliffe, I.T. (textbook); Pearson & Hotelling (origins) | Breiman, L. |
| ประเภท≠ | Method | Unsupervised dimensionality reduction | Ensemble (bagging of decision trees) |
| แหล่งต้นตำรับ≠ | Thurstone, L. L. (1947). Multiple Factor Analysis. University of Chicago Press. DOI ↗ | Jolliffe, I.T. (2002). Principal Component Analysis (2nd ed.). Springer. DOI ↗ | Breiman, L. (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45, 5–32. DOI ↗ |
| ชื่อเรียกอื่น≠ | EFA, CFA, latent variable modeling | Temel Bileşenler Analizi (PCA), PCA, principal components analysis, Karhunen-Loève transform | Rastgele Orman (Random Forest), rastgele orman, random decision forest, bagged tree ensemble |
| ที่เกี่ยวข้อง≠ | 3 | 3 | 4 |
| สรุป≠ | Factor 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. | 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. | Random Forest is an ensemble learning method, introduced by Leo Breiman in 2001, that grows many decision trees on bootstrap samples of the data and combines their votes to produce strong classification and regression. By pooling many slightly different trees, it produces more accurate and more stable predictions than any single tree. |
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