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  2. Principal component analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principal_component_analysis

    Principal component analysis (PCA) is a linear dimensionality reduction technique with applications in exploratory data analysis, visualization and data preprocessing. The data is linearly transformed onto a new coordinate system such that the directions (principal components) capturing the largest variation in the data can be easily identified.

  3. Plate count agar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_count_agar

    Plate count agar (PCA), also called standard methods agar (SMA), is a microbiological growth medium commonly used to assess or to monitor "total" or viable bacterial growth of a sample. PCA is not a selective medium. The total number of living aerobic bacteria can be determined using a plate count agar which is a substrate for bacteria to grow on.

  4. Principal component regression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principal_component_regression

    In statistics, principal component regression (PCR) is a regression analysis technique that is based on principal component analysis (PCA). PCR is a form of reduced rank regression . [ 1 ] More specifically, PCR is used for estimating the unknown regression coefficients in a standard linear regression model .

  5. Scree plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scree_plot

    A sample scree plot produced in R.The Kaiser criterion is shown in red.. In multivariate statistics, a scree plot is a line plot of the eigenvalues of factors or principal components in an analysis. [1]

  6. L1-norm principal component analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L1-norm_principal...

    L1-norm principal component analysis (L1-PCA) is a general method for multivariate data analysis. [1] L1-PCA is often preferred over standard L2-norm principal component analysis (PCA) when the analyzed data may contain outliers (faulty values or corruptions), as it is believed to be robust .

  7. Kernel principal component analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernel_principal_component...

    Output after kernel PCA, with a Gaussian kernel. Note in particular that the first principal component is enough to distinguish the three different groups, which is impossible using only linear PCA, because linear PCA operates only in the given (in this case two-dimensional) space, in which these concentric point clouds are not linearly separable.

  8. ANOVA–simultaneous component analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANOVA–simultaneous...

    It combines the principles of two other methods: Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), which assesses how much of the variation in a dataset is explained by different experimental conditions or factors, and Simultaneous Component Analysis (SCA), mathematically equivalent to Principal Component Analysis (PCA), which simplifies the interpretation of ...

  9. Non-negative matrix factorization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-negative_matrix...

    It was later shown that some types of NMF are an instance of a more general probabilistic model called "multinomial PCA". [44] When NMF is obtained by minimizing the Kullback–Leibler divergence, it is in fact equivalent to another instance of multinomial PCA, probabilistic latent semantic analysis, [45] trained by maximum likelihood estimation.