CHull as an alternative to AIC and BIC in the context of mixtures of factor analyzers

被引:0
|
作者
Kirsten Bulteel
Tom F. Wilderjans
Francis Tuerlinckx
Eva Ceulemans
机构
[1] KU Leuven,Methodology of Educational Sciences Research Group
[2] KU Leuven,undefined
来源
Behavior Research Methods | 2013年 / 45卷
关键词
Mixture analysis; Model selection; AIC; BIC; CHull;
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学科分类号
摘要
Mixture analysis is commonly used for clustering objects on the basis of multivariate data. When the data contain a large number of variables, regular mixture analysis may become problematic, because a large number of parameters need to be estimated for each cluster. To tackle this problem, the mixtures-of-factor-analyzers (MFA) model was proposed, which combines clustering with exploratory factor analysis. MFA model selection is rather intricate, as both the number of clusters and the number of underlying factors have to be determined. To this end, the Akaike (AIC) and Bayesian (BIC) information criteria are often used. AIC and BIC try to identify a model that optimally balances model fit and model complexity. In this article, the CHull (Ceulemans & Kiers, 2006) method, which also balances model fit and complexity, is presented as an interesting alternative model selection strategy for MFA. In an extensive simulation study, the performances of AIC, BIC, and CHull were compared. AIC performs poorly and systematically selects overly complex models, whereas BIC performs slightly better than CHull when considering the best model only. However, when taking model selection uncertainty into account by looking at the first three models retained, CHull outperforms BIC. This especially holds in more complex, and thus more realistic, situations (e.g., more clusters, factors, noise in the data, and overlap among clusters).
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页码:782 / 791
页数:9
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