Unit Selection with Nonbinary Treatment and Effect

08/20/2022
by   Ang Li, et al.
0

The unit selection problem aims to identify a set of individuals who are most likely to exhibit a desired mode of behavior, for example, selecting individuals who would respond one way if encouraged and a different way if not encouraged. Using a combination of experimental and observational data, Li and Pearl derived tight bounds on the "benefit function", which is the payoff/cost associated with selecting an individual with given characteristics. This paper extends the benefit function to the general form such that the treatment and effect are not restricted to binary. We propose an algorithm to test the identifiability of the nonbinary benefit function and an algorithm to compute the bounds of the nonbinary benefit function using experimental and observational data.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
09/15/2021

Unit Selection with Causal Diagram

The unit selection problem aims to identify a set of individuals who are...
research
10/15/2022

Unit Selection: Learning Benefit Function from Finite Population Data

The unit selection problem is to identify a group of individuals who are...
research
10/10/2022

Unit Selection: Case Study and Comparison with A/B Test Heuristic

The unit selection problem defined by Li and Pearl identifies individual...
research
02/28/2023

An Algorithm and Complexity Results for Causal Unit Selection

The unit selection problem aims to identify objects, called units, that ...
research
05/17/2023

Sharp symbolic nonparametric bounds for measures of benefit in observational and imperfect randomized studies with ordinal outcomes

The probability of benefit is a valuable and important measure of treatm...
research
02/25/2020

Causal Inference With Selectively-Deconfounded Data

Given only data generated by a standard confounding graph with unobserve...
research
08/19/2022

Probabilities of Causation with Nonbinary Treatment and Effect

This paper deals with the problem of estimating the probabilities of cau...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset