Abstract

This paper is concerned with discovering linear functional relationships among $k$ $p$-variate populations with mean vectors $\vmu_{i}$, $i=1,\ldots ,k$ and a common covariance matrix $\Sigma$. We consider a linear functional relationship to be one in which each of the specified $r$ mean vectors, for example, $\vmu_{1}, \ldots, \vmu_{r}$ are expressed as linear functions of the remainder mean vectors $\vmu_{r+1}, \ldots, \vmu_{k}$. This definition differs from the classical linear functional relationship, originally studied by Anderson [1], Fujikoshi [8] and others, in that there are $r$ linear relationships among $k$ mean vectors without any specification of $k$ populations. To derive our linear functional relationship, we first obtain a likelihood test statistic when the covariance matrix $\Sigma$ is known. Second, the asymptotic distribution of the test statistic is studied in a high-dimensional framework. Its accuracy is examined by simulation.

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