In anchor modeling, each speaker utterance is represented as a fixed-length location vector in the space of reference speakers by scoring against a set of anchor models. SVM-based speaker verification systems using the anchor location representation have been studied in previously reported work with promising results. In this paper, linear combination weights in reference speaker weighting (RSW) adaptation are explored as an alternative kind of speaker location representation. And this kind of RSW location representation is compared with the anchor location representation in various speaker verification tasks on the 2006 NIST Speaker Recognition Evaluation corpus. Experimental results indicate that with long utterances for reliable maximum likelihood estimation in RSW, the RSW location representation leads to better speaker verification performance than the anchor location; while the latter is more effective for verification of short utterances in high-dimensional representation space.