Brake Design Report
Brake Design Report
Rajdeep Chakraborti
Good Atmosphere Attractive dcor Spacious Cleanliness of restaurant Organization of service Neatness / uncluttered
Basic concepts
Suppose we have students grade for Math, Physics and English. Let us assume that students performance in these courses is the function of their general intelligence (F) and their aptitude for the subject areas. Hence, students grade for any course is a function of
Their general intelligence Their aptitude for a given course.
Local (i.e. conditional independence): Given the factor, observed variables are independent of one another. Cov( Xj ,Xk | F ) = 0 Xs are only related to each other through their common relationship with F.
1 2
X1 X2 X3
e1 e2 e3
Xm = mF + em
Coefficients () are pattern loadings The variable is called the indicator or measure of F. F is responsible for correlation between the indicators. It is also referred as common or latent factor or an unobservable construct.
Total variance of any indicator variable can be decomposed into two components:
Variance that is common with general intelligence, F and is given by square of pattern loading Commonality of the indicator with the common factor The variance that is with the specific factor e which the difference between the variance of the variable and the commonality Unique/specific/error variance
Key Concepts
F is latent (i.e.unobserved, underlying) variable
Suppose the variables have a 0.00 correlation Variable A No line (that is, no
Variable B
x - axis
x - axis
Variable B
Some are near
Variable C
Variable B
Variable C
A priori criterion
Attempts to replicate the structure of others Best when one has a good theoretical idea of what to expect.
Rotation of Factors
The factor loadings could be plot in a scatter plot, with each variable represented as a point.
The axis of this plot could be rotated in any direction without changing the relative locations of the points to each other; however, the actual coordinates of the points, that is, the factor loadings would change. Sometimes such rotations allow a clearer view of the factors
F1
4
F1
x1 x2 x3 x4
x1 x2 x3 x4
Factor 1 0 0 -0.9 0
Rotational Strategies
The goal of all of rotational strategies is to obtain a clear pattern of loadings, that is, factors that are somehow clearly marked by high loadings for some variables and low loadings for others.
Typical rotational strategies are varimax (variance maximizing), quartimax, and equamax.
FACTOR ANALYSIS.