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| The CORRESP Procedure |
Correspondence analysis is a popular data analysis method in France and
Japan. In France, correspondence analysis was developed under the
strong influence of Jean-Paul Benz
cri; in Japan, it was developed
under Chikio
Hayashi. The name correspondence analysis is a translation of the
French analyse des correspondances. The technique apparently has
many independent beginnings (for example, Richardson and Kuder 1933;
Hirshfeld 1935; Horst 1935; Fisher 1940; Guttman 1941; Burt 1950;
Hayashi 1950). It has had many other names, including optimal scaling,
reciprocal averaging, optimal scoring, and appropriate scoring in the
United States; quantification method in Japan; homogeneity analysis in
the Netherlands; dual scaling in Canada; and scalogram analysis in
Israel.
Correspondence analysis is described in more detail in French in
Benz
cri (1973) and Lebart, Morineau, and Tabard (1977). In
Japanese, the subject is described in Komazawa (1982), Nishisato (1982),
and Kobayashi (1981). In English, correspondence analysis is described
in Lebart, Morineau, and Warwick (1984), Greenacre (1984), Nishisato
(1980), Tenenhaus and Young (1985); Gifi (1990); Greenacre and Hastie
(1987); and many other sources. Hoffman and Franke (1986) offer a
short, introductory treatment using examples from the field of market
research.
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