Signed directed acyclic graphs for causal inference
Formal rules governing signed edges on causal directed acyclic graphs are described and it is shown how these rules can be useful in reasoning about causality. Specifically, the notions of a monotonic effect, a weak monotonic effect and a signed edge are introduced. Results are developed relating these monotonic effects and signed edges to the sign of the causal effect of an intervention in the presence of intermediate variables. The incorporation of signed edges in the directed acyclic graph causal framework furthermore allows for the development of rules governing the relationship between monotonic effects and the sign of the covariance between two variables. It is shown that when certain assumptions about monotonic effects can be made then these results can be used to draw conclusions about the presence of causal effects even when data are missing on confounding variables. Copyright (c) 2010 Royal Statistical Society.
Year of publication: |
2010
|
---|---|
Authors: | VanderWeele, Tyler J. ; Robins, James M. |
Published in: |
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B. - Royal Statistical Society - RSS, ISSN 1369-7412. - Vol. 72.2010, 1, p. 111-127
|
Publisher: |
Royal Statistical Society - RSS |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Multiply Robust Inference for Statistical Interactions
Vansteelandt, Stijn, (2008)
-
Empirical and counterfactual conditions for sufficient cause interactions
Vanderweele, Tyler J., (2008)
-
Semiparametric tests for sufficient cause interaction
Vansteelandt, Stijn, (2012)
- More ...