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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shrier, Ian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.19346
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author Shrier, Ian
author_facet Shrier, Ian
contents There have been numerous publications on the advantages and disadvantages of estimating natural (pure) effects compared to controlled effects. One of the main criticisms of natural effects is that it requires an additional assumption for identifiability, namely that the exposure does not cause a confounder of the mediator-outcome relationship. However, every analysis in every study should begin with a research question expressed in ordinary language. Researchers then develop/use mathematical expressions or estimators to best answer these ordinary language questions. When a recanting witness is present, the paper illustrates that there are no violations of assumptions. Rather, using directed acyclic graphs, the typical estimators for natural effects are simply no longer answering any meaningful question. Although some might view this as semantics, the proposed approach illustrates why the more recent methods of path-specific effects and separable effects are more valid and transparent compared to previous methods for decomposition analysis.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2402_19346
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Recanting witness and natural direct effects: Violations of assumptions or definitions?
Shrier, Ian
Methodology
There have been numerous publications on the advantages and disadvantages of estimating natural (pure) effects compared to controlled effects. One of the main criticisms of natural effects is that it requires an additional assumption for identifiability, namely that the exposure does not cause a confounder of the mediator-outcome relationship. However, every analysis in every study should begin with a research question expressed in ordinary language. Researchers then develop/use mathematical expressions or estimators to best answer these ordinary language questions. When a recanting witness is present, the paper illustrates that there are no violations of assumptions. Rather, using directed acyclic graphs, the typical estimators for natural effects are simply no longer answering any meaningful question. Although some might view this as semantics, the proposed approach illustrates why the more recent methods of path-specific effects and separable effects are more valid and transparent compared to previous methods for decomposition analysis.
title Recanting witness and natural direct effects: Violations of assumptions or definitions?
topic Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.19346