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24 March 2023
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publication date: 20 March 2020
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publication date: 25 March 2020
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publication date: 7 May 2020
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publication date: 9 June 2021
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publication date: 10 December 2021
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publication date: 25 March 2022
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publication date: 22 January 2023
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publication date: 31 October 2023
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31 October 2023
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When causal quantities are not identifiable from the observed data, it still may be possible to bound these quantities using the observed data. We outline a class of problems for which the derivation of tight bounds is always a linear programming problem and can therefore, at least theoretically, be solved using a symbolic linear optimizer. We extend and generalize the approach of Balke and Pearl (1994) <doi:10.1016/B978-1-55860-332-5.50011-0> and we provide a user friendly graphical interface for setting up such problems via directed acyclic graphs (DAG), which only allow for problems within this class to be depicted. The user can then define linear constraints to further refine their assumptions to meet their specific problem, and then specify a causal query using a text interface. The program converts this user defined DAG, query, and constraints, and returns tight bounds. The bounds can be converted to R functions to evaluate them for specific datasets, and to latex code for publication. The methods and proofs of tightness and validity of the bounds are described in a paper by Sachs, Jonzon, Gabriel, and Sjölander (2022) <doi:10.1080/10618600.2022.2071905>.
Property / description: When causal quantities are not identifiable from the observed data, it still may be possible to bound these quantities using the observed data. We outline a class of problems for which the derivation of tight bounds is always a linear programming problem and can therefore, at least theoretically, be solved using a symbolic linear optimizer. We extend and generalize the approach of Balke and Pearl (1994) <doi:10.1016/B978-1-55860-332-5.50011-0> and we provide a user friendly graphical interface for setting up such problems via directed acyclic graphs (DAG), which only allow for problems within this class to be depicted. The user can then define linear constraints to further refine their assumptions to meet their specific problem, and then specify a causal query using a text interface. The program converts this user defined DAG, query, and constraints, and returns tight bounds. The bounds can be converted to R functions to evaluate them for specific datasets, and to latex code for publication. The methods and proofs of tightness and validity of the bounds are described in a paper by Sachs, Jonzon, Gabriel, and Sjölander (2022) <doi:10.1080/10618600.2022.2071905>. / rank
 
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Property / author: Michael C. Sachs / rank
 
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Property / author: Erin E. Gabriel / rank
 
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Property / author: Arvid Sjölander / rank
 
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Property / author: Gustav Jonzon / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: MIT license / rank
 
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Property / copyright license: File License / rank
 
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Property / depends on software: igraph / rank
 
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Property / depends on software: R / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Counterfactual Probabilities: Computational Methods, Bounds and Applications / rank
 
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Property / cites work: A General Method for Deriving Tight Symbolic Bounds on Causal Effects / rank
 
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Property / MaRDI profile type: MaRDI software profile / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 19:56, 12 March 2024

An Interface to Specify Causal Graphs and Compute Bounds on Causal Effects
Language Label Description Also known as
English
causaloptim
An Interface to Specify Causal Graphs and Compute Bounds on Causal Effects

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    0.9.7
    24 March 2023
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    0.6.4
    20 March 2020
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    0.6.5
    25 March 2020
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    0.7.1
    7 May 2020
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    9 June 2021
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    0.9.1
    10 December 2021
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    25 March 2022
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    22 January 2023
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    0.9.8
    31 October 2023
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    31 October 2023
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    When causal quantities are not identifiable from the observed data, it still may be possible to bound these quantities using the observed data. We outline a class of problems for which the derivation of tight bounds is always a linear programming problem and can therefore, at least theoretically, be solved using a symbolic linear optimizer. We extend and generalize the approach of Balke and Pearl (1994) <doi:10.1016/B978-1-55860-332-5.50011-0> and we provide a user friendly graphical interface for setting up such problems via directed acyclic graphs (DAG), which only allow for problems within this class to be depicted. The user can then define linear constraints to further refine their assumptions to meet their specific problem, and then specify a causal query using a text interface. The program converts this user defined DAG, query, and constraints, and returns tight bounds. The bounds can be converted to R functions to evaluate them for specific datasets, and to latex code for publication. The methods and proofs of tightness and validity of the bounds are described in a paper by Sachs, Jonzon, Gabriel, and Sjölander (2022) <doi:10.1080/10618600.2022.2071905>.
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