A hierarchical eigenmodel for pooled covariance estimation

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Abstract

Although the covariance matrices corresponding to different populations are unlikely to be exactly equal they can still exhibit a high degree of similarity. For example, some pairs of variables may be positively correlated across most groups, whereas the correlation between other pairs may be consistently negative. In such cases much of the similarity across covariance matrices can be described by similarities in their principal axes, which are the axes that are defined by the eigenvectors of the covariance matrices. Estimating the degree of across-population eigenvector heterogeneity can be helpful for a variety of estimation tasks. For example, eigenvector matrices can be pooled to form a central set of principal axes and, to the extent that the axes are similar, covariance estimates for populations having small sample sizes can be stabilized by shrinking their principal axes towards the across-population centre. To this end, the paper develops a hierarchical model and estimation procedure for pooling principal axes across several populations. The model for the across-group heterogeneity is based on a matrix-valued antipodally symmetric Bingham distribution that can flexibly describe notions of 'centre' and 'spread' for a population of orthogonal matrices. © 2009 Royal Statistical Society.

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APA

Hoff, P. D. (2009). A hierarchical eigenmodel for pooled covariance estimation. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B: Statistical Methodology, 71(5), 971–992. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9868.2009.00716.x

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