Over the last couple of years I have written quite a few
R programs for various "psychometric" techniques, and I am
regularly updating and expanding what is there. I now
have (wholly or partially), or have planned

-- gifi package (update to homals on CRAN). Code for
    multiple correspondence analysis, nonlinear principal
    component analysis, nonlinear multiset canonical
    correlation analysis. Implements everything in Gifi (1990)
    or SPSS Categories, and then some. Status: done.

-- aspect package (optimizing functions of correlation
    matrices over transformations/quantifications of the variables --
    functions implemented are sums of eigenvalues, determinants,  
multiple
    correlations, power sums). Status: done.

-- optim package (miscellaneous optimization routines -- currently has
    pooled-adjacent-violaters for monotone regression and
    the hildreth-desopo coordinate descent method for quadratic
    programming). Status: will grow.

-- ca package (simple correspondence analysis with various
    plotting options). Status: done.

-- smacof package (metric and nonmetric multidimensional
    scaling, individual difference models, rectangular matrices,
    constrained scaling, metric nearness problem, Shepard-Luce
    models). Status: mostly done.

-- logitfold package (logistic likelihood solution to nonmetric
    unfolding for binary and multicategory data, multidimensional
    choice models, logistic principal component analysis and
    canonical analysis, roll-call models, multidimensional Rasch  
models).
    Status: partly done.

-- lssem package (linear structural equation models with latent
    variables, reformulated as matrix decomposition problems, and
    solved by majorizing least squares loss functions). Status:
    planning stage.

-- threeway package (multiway generalizations of principal component
    analysis with various constraints on the decomposition). Status:
    on the horizon.

All of this is currently in straightforward R, without any compiled C  
code,
and without any OOP.

The idea is that eventually these will be nicely organized in
R packages that pass the checks and are internally documented.
But "eventually" can take a pretty long time. Also, I expect that
some of this will wind up on www.jstatsoft.org, but again,
probably not any time soon.

Also, I would be more than willing to embed this stuff in general
multi-person projects such as

        R in Psychometrics
        R in Econometrics
        R in Social Statistics

but that will require someone else running these shows.

For the time being, if you want to receive information about updates  
of this
and related R code and papers in the area of multidimensional
scaling, item response theory, choice models, factor analysis,
and simultaneous equation models, please subscribe to

http://lists.stat.ucla.edu/mailman/listinfo/albertgifi

===
Jan de Leeuw; Distinguished Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of  
Statistics;
Editor: Journal of Multivariate Analysis, Journal of Statistical  
Software
US mail: 8130 Math Sciences Bldg, Box 951554, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1554
phone (310)-825-9550;  fax (310)-206-5658;  email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
.mac: jdeleeuw ++++++  aim: deleeuwjan ++++++ skype: j_deleeuw
homepages: http://gifi.stat.ucla.edu ++++++ http://www.cuddyvalley.org
   
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
-------------------------
           No matter where you go, there you are. --- Buckaroo Banzai
                    http://gifi.stat.ucla.edu/sounds/nomatter.au

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