Disentangling confounding and nonsense associations due to dependence
Event details
Date | 05.03.2021 |
Hour | 15:15 › 16:30 |
Speaker | Elizabeth L. Ogburn, Johns Hopkins |
Location | Online |
Category | Conferences - Seminars |
Nonsense associations can arise when an exposure and an outcome of interest exhibit similar patterns of dependence. Confounding is present when potential outcomes are not independent of treatment.
This talk will describe how confusion about these two phenomena results in shortcomings in popular methods in two areas: (1) causal inference with multiple treatments and unmeasured confounding and (2) causal and statistical inference with social network data.
For each of these areas I will demonstrate the flaws in existing methods and describe new methods that were inspired by careful consideration of dependence and confounding.
This talk will describe how confusion about these two phenomena results in shortcomings in popular methods in two areas: (1) causal inference with multiple treatments and unmeasured confounding and (2) causal and statistical inference with social network data.
For each of these areas I will demonstrate the flaws in existing methods and describe new methods that were inspired by careful consideration of dependence and confounding.
Practical information
- Informed public
- Free
Organizer
- Mats Stensrud
Contact
- Maroussia Schaffner