[R] isoMDS vs. other non-metric non-R routines

stevenmh at muohio.edu stevenmh at muohio.edu
Wed Feb 14 19:21:52 CET 2007


Hi Phil,
Are you using metaMDS in the vegan package? This allows you to determine
the number of random starts, and selects the best. It might help.
Hank Stevens
> Dear Phil,
>
> I don't have experiences with Minissa but I know that isoMDS is bad in
> some situations. I have even seen situations with non-metric
> dissimilarities in which the classical MDS was preferable.
>
> Some alternatives that you have:
> 1) Try to start isoMDS from other initial configurations (by default, it
> starts from the classical solution).
> 2) Try sammon mapping (command should be "sammon").
> 3) Have a look at XGvis/GGvis (which may be part of XGobi/GGobi). These
> are not directly part of R but have R interfaces. They allow you to toy
> around quite a lot with different algorithms, stress functions (the
> isoMDS stress is not necessarily what you want) and initial
> configurations so that you can find a better solution and understand your
> data better. Unfortunately I don't have the time to give you more detail,
> but google for it (or somebody else will tell you more).
>
> Best,
> Christian
>
>
> On Tue, 13 Feb 2007, Philip Leifeld wrote:
>
>> Dear useRs,
>>
>> last week I asked you about a problem related to isoMDS. It turned
>> out that in my case isoMDS was trapped. Nonetheless, I still have
>> some problems with other data sets. Therefore I would like to know if
>> anyone here has experience with how well isoMDS performs in
>> comparison to other non-metric MDS routines, like Minissa.
>>
>> I have the feeling that for large data sets with a high stress value
>> (e.g. around 0.20) in cases where the intrinsic dimensionality of the
>> data cannot be significantly reduced without considerably increasing
>> stress, isoMDS performs worse (and yields a stress value of 0.31 in
>> my example), while solutions tend to be similar for better fits and
>> lower intrinsic dimensionality. I tried this on another data set
>> where isoMDS yields a stress value of 0.19 and Minissa a stress value
>> of 0.14.
>>
>> Now the latter would still be considered a fair solution by some
>> people while the former indicates a poor fit regardless of how strict
>> your judgment is. I generally prefer using R over mixing with
>> different programs, so it would be nice if results were of comparable
>> quality...
>>
>> Cheers
>>
>> Phil
>>
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>
> *** --- ***
> Christian Hennig
> University College London, Department of Statistical Science
> Gower St., London WC1E 6BT, phone +44 207 679 1698
> chrish at stats.ucl.ac.uk, www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~ucakche
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide
> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>



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