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Analyzing instability of industrial clustering techniques

Shunsuke Okamoto ()

Environmental Economics and Policy Studies, 2015, vol. 17, issue 3, 389-406

Abstract: The process life-cycle assessment (LCA) method has a crucial problem such that the LCA system boundary is freely decided by LCA practitioners, which consequently leads to truncation error and underestimation of life-cycle emission. This paper focuses on clustering methods (eigenvalue decomposition of the normalized Laplacian matrix and nonnegative matrix factorization of the normalized affinity matrix) which are useful in determining the LCA system boundary and investigates the instability of the clustering methods. The results indicate that, in cases involving a relatively small number of K-means repetitions (approximately 10), choosing the nonnegative matrix factorization method over the eigenvalue decomposition method yields smaller values of “normalized cut” value N cut (an indicator showing the goodness of network partitions), the benchmark indicating optimal cluster assignment. On the other hand, for a larger number of K-means repetitions (100 or more), neither method is universally superior to the other. Copyright Springer Japan 2015

Keywords: LCA system boundary; CO 2 -intensive clusters; Clustering analysis; Input–output analysis; Discrete optimization (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)

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DOI: 10.1007/s10018-014-0086-x

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