Abstract

Abstract Varimax factor rotations, while popular among practitioners in psychology and statistics since being introduced by Kaiser (1958), have historically been viewed with skepticism and suspicion by some theoreticians and mathematical statisticians. Now, work by Rohe & Zeng (2023) provides new, fundamental insight: varimax rotations provably perform statistical estimation in certain classes of latent variable models when paired with spectral-based matrix truncations for dimensionality reduction. We build on this new-found understanding of varimax rotations by developing further connections to network analysis and spectral methods rooted in entrywise matrix perturbation analysis. Concretely, this paper establishes the asymptotic multivariate normality of vectors in varimax-transformed Euclidean point clouds that represent low-dimensional node embeddings in certain latent space random graph models. We address related concepts including network sparsity, data denoising and the role of matrix rank in latent variable parameterizations. Collectively, these findings, at the confluence of classical and contemporary multivariate analysis, reinforce methodology and inference procedures grounded in matrix factorization-based techniques. Numerical examples illustrate our findings and supplement our discussion.

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