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Main Authors: Hlaváčková-Schindler, Kateřina, Wöß, Rainer, Pecorino, Vera, Schindler, Philip
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.01398
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author Hlaváčková-Schindler, Kateřina
Wöß, Rainer
Pecorino, Vera
Schindler, Philip
author_facet Hlaváčková-Schindler, Kateřina
Wöß, Rainer
Pecorino, Vera
Schindler, Philip
contents Not much has been written about the role of triggers in the literature on causal reasoning, causal modeling, or philosophy. In this paper, we focus on describing triggers and causes in the metaphysical sense and on characterizations that differentiate them from each other. We carry out a philosophical analysis of these differences. From this, we formulate a definition that clearly differentiates triggers from causes and can be used for causal reasoning in natural sciences. We propose a mathematical model and the Cause-Trigger algorithm, which, based on given data to observable processes, is able to determine whether a process is a cause or a trigger of an effect. The possibility to distinguish triggers from causes directly from data makes the algorithm a useful tool in natural sciences using observational data, but also for real-world scenarios. For example, knowing the processes that trigger causes of a tropical storm could give politicians time to develop actions such as evacuation the population. Similarly, knowing the triggers of processes that cause global warming could help politicians focus on effective actions. We demonstrate our algorithm on the climatological data of two recent cyclones, Freddy and Zazu. The Cause-Trigger algorithm detects processes that trigger high wind speed in both storms during their cyclogenesis. The findings obtained agree with expert knowledge.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_01398
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Cause or Trigger? From Philosophy to Causal Modeling
Hlaváčková-Schindler, Kateřina
Wöß, Rainer
Pecorino, Vera
Schindler, Philip
Machine Learning
Methodology
Not much has been written about the role of triggers in the literature on causal reasoning, causal modeling, or philosophy. In this paper, we focus on describing triggers and causes in the metaphysical sense and on characterizations that differentiate them from each other. We carry out a philosophical analysis of these differences. From this, we formulate a definition that clearly differentiates triggers from causes and can be used for causal reasoning in natural sciences. We propose a mathematical model and the Cause-Trigger algorithm, which, based on given data to observable processes, is able to determine whether a process is a cause or a trigger of an effect. The possibility to distinguish triggers from causes directly from data makes the algorithm a useful tool in natural sciences using observational data, but also for real-world scenarios. For example, knowing the processes that trigger causes of a tropical storm could give politicians time to develop actions such as evacuation the population. Similarly, knowing the triggers of processes that cause global warming could help politicians focus on effective actions. We demonstrate our algorithm on the climatological data of two recent cyclones, Freddy and Zazu. The Cause-Trigger algorithm detects processes that trigger high wind speed in both storms during their cyclogenesis. The findings obtained agree with expert knowledge.
title Cause or Trigger? From Philosophy to Causal Modeling
topic Machine Learning
Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.01398