Literature DB >> 28766699

A method of factor analysis for shape coordinates.

Fred L Bookstein1,2.   

Abstract

Currently the most common reporting style for a geometric morphometric (GMM) analysis of anthropological data begins with the principal components of the shape coordinates to which the original landmark data have been converted. But this focus often frustrates the organismal biologist, mainly because principal component analysis (PCA) is not aimed at scientific interpretability of the loading patterns actually uncovered. The difficulty of making biological sense of a PCA is heightened by aspects of the shape coordinate setting that further diverge from our intuitive expectations of how morphometric measurements ought to combine. More than 50 years ago one of our sister disciplines, psychometrics, managed to build an algorithmic route from principal component analysis to scientific understanding via the toolkit generally known as factor analysis. This article introduces a modification of one standard factor-analysis approach, Henry Kaiser's varimax rotation of 1958, that accommodates two of the major differences between the GMM context and the psychometric context for these approaches: the coexistence of "general" and "special" factors of form as adumbrated by Sewall Wright, and the typical loglinearity of partial warp variance as a function of bending energy. I briefly explain the history of principal components in biometrics and the contrast with factor analysis, introduce the modified varimax algorithm I am recommending, and work three examples that are reanalyses of previously published cranial data sets. A closing discussion emphasizes the desirability of superseding PCA by algorithms aimed at anthropological understanding rather than classification or ordination.
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords:  BE-PwV plot; geometric morphometrics; principal components; shape coordinates; varimax factor rotation

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28766699     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.23277

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  4 in total

1.  Morphometric Variation at Different Spatial Scales: Coordination and Compensation in the Emergence of Organismal Form.

Authors:  Philipp Mitteroecker; Silvester Bartsch; Corinna Erkinger; Nicole D S Grunstra; Anne Le Maître; Fred L Bookstein
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2020-09-01       Impact factor: 15.683

2.  Arabidopsis phenotyping through geometric morphometrics.

Authors:  Carlos A Manacorda; Sebastian Asurmendi
Journal:  Gigascience       Date:  2018-07-01       Impact factor: 6.524

3.  Individual variation of the masticatory system dominates 3D skull shape in the herbivory-adapted marsupial wombats.

Authors:  Vera Weisbecker; Thomas Guillerme; Cruise Speck; Emma Sherratt; Hyab Mehari Abraha; Alana C Sharp; Claire E Terhune; Simon Collins; Stephen Johnston; Olga Panagiotopoulou
Journal:  Front Zool       Date:  2019-11-01       Impact factor: 3.172

4.  Correlation between Acylcarnitine and Peripheral Neuropathy in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

Authors:  Zhenni An; Danmeng Zheng; Dongzhuo Wei; Dingwen Jiang; Xuejiao Xing; Chang Liu
Journal:  J Diabetes Res       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 4.011

  4 in total

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