Recovering from Selection Bias in Causal and Statistical Inference

Authors

  • Elias Bareinboim UCLA
  • Jin Tian Iowa State University
  • Judea Pearl UCLA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v28i1.9074

Keywords:

selection bias, sampling bias, causal inference, causality, statistical inference

Abstract

Selection bias is caused by preferential exclusion of units from the samples and represents a major obstacle to valid causal and statistical inferences; it cannot be removed by randomized experiments and can rarely be detected in either experimental or observational studies. In this paper, we provide complete graphical and algorithmic conditions for recovering conditional probabilities from selection biased data. We also provide graphical conditions for recoverability when unbiased data is available over a subset of the variables. Finally, we provide a graphical condition that generalizes the backdoor criterion and serves to recover causal effects when the data is collected under preferential selection.

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Published

2014-06-21

How to Cite

Bareinboim, E., Tian, J., & Pearl, J. (2014). Recovering from Selection Bias in Causal and Statistical Inference. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 28(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v28i1.9074

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track: Reasoning under Uncertainty