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Main Authors: Freidling, Tobias, Zhao, Qingyuan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.00040
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author Freidling, Tobias
Zhao, Qingyuan
author_facet Freidling, Tobias
Zhao, Qingyuan
contents Causal inference necessarily relies upon untestable assumptions; hence, it is crucial to assess the robustness of obtained results to violations of identification assumptions. However, such sensitivity analysis is only occasionally undertaken in practice, as many existing methods require analytically tractable solutions and their results are often difficult to interpret. We take a more flexible approach to sensitivity analysis and view it as a constrained stochastic optimization problem. This work focuses on sensitivity analysis for a linear causal effect when an unmeasured confounder and a potential instrument are present. We show how the bias of the OLS and TSLS estimands can be expressed in terms of partial correlations. Leveraging the algebraic rules that relate different partial correlations, practitioners can specify intuitive sensitivity models which bound the bias. We further show that the heuristic "plug-in" sensitivity interval may not have any confidence guarantees; instead, we propose a bootstrap approach to construct sensitivity intervals which performs well in numerical simulations. We illustrate the proposed methods with a real study on the causal effect of education on earnings and provide user-friendly visualization tools.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2022
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Optimization-based Sensitivity Analysis for Unmeasured Confounding using Partial Correlations
Freidling, Tobias
Zhao, Qingyuan
Methodology
Causal inference necessarily relies upon untestable assumptions; hence, it is crucial to assess the robustness of obtained results to violations of identification assumptions. However, such sensitivity analysis is only occasionally undertaken in practice, as many existing methods require analytically tractable solutions and their results are often difficult to interpret. We take a more flexible approach to sensitivity analysis and view it as a constrained stochastic optimization problem. This work focuses on sensitivity analysis for a linear causal effect when an unmeasured confounder and a potential instrument are present. We show how the bias of the OLS and TSLS estimands can be expressed in terms of partial correlations. Leveraging the algebraic rules that relate different partial correlations, practitioners can specify intuitive sensitivity models which bound the bias. We further show that the heuristic "plug-in" sensitivity interval may not have any confidence guarantees; instead, we propose a bootstrap approach to construct sensitivity intervals which performs well in numerical simulations. We illustrate the proposed methods with a real study on the causal effect of education on earnings and provide user-friendly visualization tools.
title Optimization-based Sensitivity Analysis for Unmeasured Confounding using Partial Correlations
topic Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.00040