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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wang, Xiaoya, Cook, Richard J., Zhu, Yeying, Akkaya-Hocagil, Tugba, Carter, R. Colin, Jacobson, Sandra W., Jacobson, Joseph L., Ryan, Louise M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09237
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author Wang, Xiaoya
Cook, Richard J.
Zhu, Yeying
Akkaya-Hocagil, Tugba
Carter, R. Colin
Jacobson, Sandra W.
Jacobson, Joseph L.
Ryan, Louise M.
author_facet Wang, Xiaoya
Cook, Richard J.
Zhu, Yeying
Akkaya-Hocagil, Tugba
Carter, R. Colin
Jacobson, Sandra W.
Jacobson, Joseph L.
Ryan, Louise M.
contents We address the challenge of causal inference status and the dose-response effects with a semi-continuous exposure. A two-stage approach is proposed using estimating equation for multiple outcomes with large sample properties derived for the resulting estimators. Homogeneity tests are developed to assess whether causal effects of exposure status and the dose-response effects are the same across multiple outcomes. A global homogeneity test is also developed to assess whether the effect of exposure status (exposed/not exposed) and the dose-response effect of the continuous exposure level are each equal across all outcomes. The methods of estimation and testing are rigorously evaluated in simulation studies and applied to a motivating study on the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on childhood cognition defined by executive function (EF), academic achievement in math, and learning and memory (LM).
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_09237
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Prenatal alcohol exposure and child cognition: semi-continuous exposures, causal inference and evidence synthesis
Wang, Xiaoya
Cook, Richard J.
Zhu, Yeying
Akkaya-Hocagil, Tugba
Carter, R. Colin
Jacobson, Sandra W.
Jacobson, Joseph L.
Ryan, Louise M.
Methodology
We address the challenge of causal inference status and the dose-response effects with a semi-continuous exposure. A two-stage approach is proposed using estimating equation for multiple outcomes with large sample properties derived for the resulting estimators. Homogeneity tests are developed to assess whether causal effects of exposure status and the dose-response effects are the same across multiple outcomes. A global homogeneity test is also developed to assess whether the effect of exposure status (exposed/not exposed) and the dose-response effect of the continuous exposure level are each equal across all outcomes. The methods of estimation and testing are rigorously evaluated in simulation studies and applied to a motivating study on the effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on childhood cognition defined by executive function (EF), academic achievement in math, and learning and memory (LM).
title Prenatal alcohol exposure and child cognition: semi-continuous exposures, causal inference and evidence synthesis
topic Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09237