Howland, PegPark, Haesun2020-09-022020-09-022003-02-21https://hdl.handle.net/11299/215556Discriminant analysis has been used for decades to extract features that preserve class separability. It is commonly defined as an optimization problem involving covariance matrices that represent the scatter within and between clusters. The requirement that one of these matrices be nonsingular limits its application to data sets with certain relative dimensions. We examine a number of optimization criteria, and extend their applicability by using the generalized singular value decomposition to circumvent the nonsingularity requirement. The result is a generalization of discriminant analysis that can be applied even when the sample size is smaller than the dimension of the sample data. We use classification results from thereduced representation to compare the effectiveness of this approach with some alternatives, and conclude with a discussion of their relative merits.en-USGeneralizing Discriminant Analysis Using the Generalized Singular Value DecompositionReport