The Agincourt Health and Demographic Surveillance System has since 2001
conducted a biannual household asset survey in order to quantify household
socio-economic status (SES) in a rural population living in northeast South
Africa. The survey contains binary, ordinal and nominal items. In the absence
of income or expenditure data, the SES landscape in the study population is
explored and described by clustering the households into homogeneous groups
based on their asset status. A model-based approach to clustering the Agincourt
households, based on latent variable models, is proposed. In the case of
modeling binary or ordinal items, item response theory models are employed. For
nominal survey items, a factor analysis model, similar in nature to a
multinomial probit model, is used. Both model types have an underlying latent
variable structure - this similarity is exploited and the models are combined
to produce a hybrid model capable of handling mixed data types. Further, a
mixture of the hybrid models is considered to provide clustering capabilities
within the context of mixed binary, ordinal and nominal response data. The
proposed model is termed a mixture of factor analyzers for mixed data (MFA-MD).
The MFA-MD model is applied to the survey data to cluster the Agincourt
households into homogeneous groups. The model is estimated within the Bayesian
paradigm, using a Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm. Intuitive groupings
result, providing insight to the different socio-economic strata within the
Agincourt region.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-AOAS726 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org