A comparison of methods for analysing regression models with both spectral and designed variables
Publication details
Journal : Journal of Chemometrics , vol. 18 , p. 451–464 , 2004
International Standard Numbers
:
Printed
:
0886-9383
Electronic
:
1099-128X
Publication type : Academic article
Links
:
DOI
:
doi.org/10.1002/cem.890
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Kjetil Aune
Chief Librarian
kjetil.aune@nofima.no
Summary
In many situations one performs designed experiments to find the relationship between a set of explanatory variables and one or more responses. Often there are other factors that influence the results in addition to the factors that are included in the design. To obtain information about these so called nuisance factors one might measure them using spectroscopic methods. The question then is how to analyze this kind of data; a combination of an orthogonal design matrix and a spectroscopic matrix with hundreds of highly collinear variables. In this paper we introduce a method that is an iterative combination of PLS and ordinary least squares and compare its performance with other methods like direct PLS, ordinary least squares and a combination of PCA and least squares. The methods are compared using two real datasets, and using simulated data. The results show that the incorporation of external information from spectroscopic measurements gives more information from the experiment and lower variance in the parameter estimates. We also find that the introduced algorithm separates the information from the spectral and design matrices in a nice way. It also has some advantages over PLS in lower bias and being less influenced by the weighting of the variables.