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Online Causal Inference Seminar - Causal Rule Ensemble

Event Details:

Tuesday, September 22, 2020
8:30am - 9:30am PDT

This event is open to:

General Public

Free and open to the public

Speaker(s): Falco Bargagli Stoffi

Webinar link

All seminars are on Tuesdays at 8:30 am PT (11:30 am ET / 4:30 pm London / 5:30 pm Berlin).

Tuesday, September 22, 2020 [Link to join] (webinar ID: 942 3597 2707 password: 007080)

  • Speaker #1: Falco Bargagli Stoffi (Harvard University)
  • Title: Causal Rule Ensemble: Interpretable Inference of Heterogeneous Treatment Effects
  • Abstract: In environmental epidemiology, it is critically important to identify subpopulations that are most vulnerable to the adverse effects of air pollution so we can develop targeted interventions. In recent years, there have been many methodological developments for addressing heterogeneity of treatment effects in causal inference. A common approach is to estimate the conditional average treatment effect (CATE) for a pre-specified covariate set. However, this approach does not provide an easy-to-interpret tool for identifying susceptible subpopulations or discover new subpopulations that are not defined a priori by the researchers. In this paper, we propose a new causal rule ensemble (CRE) method with two features simultaneously: 1) ensuring interpretability by revealing heterogeneous treatment effect structures in terms of decision rules, and 2) providing CATE estimates with high statistical precision. We provide theoretical results that guarantee consistency of the estimated causal effects for the newly discovered causal rules. Furthermore, via simulations, we show that the CRE method has competitive performance on its ability to discover subpopulations and then accurately estimate the causal effects. We also develop a new sensitivity analysis method to examine robustness to unmeasured confounding bias. Lastly, we apply the CRE method to the study of the effects of long-term exposure to air pollution on the 5-year mortality rate of the New England Medicare-enrolled population in United States.

    Joint work with Kwonsang Lee (Sungkyunkwan University) and Francesca Dominici (Harvard University)

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