O.K., If I understand @Mark_Bailey correctly, SVD is a "game-changer"; however, you need JMP Pro to play this game with JMP. Is this correct?
Thiking about this a little further, it seems like JMP (non-pro version) does not allow any of the text analysis features that I've seen in videos or read about in blogs: latent class analysis, latent semantic analysis, topic analysis, discriminant analysis, document clustering, or term clustering. As a long-time JMP user who can afford JMP but not JMP Pro, I'm still trying to figure out my more efficient next steps.
For example, if I were able to generate a singular value matrix (e.g., outside of JMP in R) and bring this matrix back into JMP, it seems like these analyses would still be unavailable to me, at least not directly, since I do not even have menus items (via the Text Explorer hotspot) for any of these analysis platforms. I just don't know enough about the statistical details to understand if trying to replicate these types of text analysis in JMP using standard principal components or clustring platforms is a good idea. For example, I just saw a post by @LauraCS where she said "latent semantic analysis (LSA) is simply PCA done on a correlation matrix of text terms (but without any rotations involved)". I'm wondering just how literal this statement is. Does this mean, that if I could bring a singular value matrix into JMP that I could use JMP's PCA tools to do analyses that are essentially identical to both Latent Semantic Analysis and Latent Class Analysis? It seems kind of risky for me to do this without a better understanding of the statistical details.
So... after obsessing about this topic for a few days, it seems like my best option might be to figure out how to go back and forth between JMP (for curation of a document term matrix and visualization) and R (for analyses) like I've seen in the @herush and @andrewtkarl video called "Text Mining in JMP and R". Seems like it might be a good time to have lunch with one of my R friends and pitch a collaboration.
I have no idea how many JMP users are in my spot (e.g., unlikely to move up to JMP Pro). Maybe I'm just pushing on stuff that the typical JMP user doesn't get at. However, if there are others like me, it would be awesome if I could find my way to additional "help" or "training" resources (e.g., blogs, tutorials, third-party videos) that illustrate synergies between JMP and R and ways to deal with situations like the one I am currently in, where 2 tools (JMP and R) are going to be necessary to get the job done.
Like I've said before. I absolutely love JMP and have used it all of my career. This won't change, but is seems like it's time for me to knuckle down and learn R. I've been told it will be worth my time, but dang, I really prefer the interactive, menu-driven workflow of JMP.