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Simulation Experiments as a Causal Problem

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  • Tyrel Stokes
  • Ian Shrier
  • Russell Steele

Abstract

Simulation methods are among the most ubiquitous methodological tools in statistical science. In particular, statisticians often is simulation to explore properties of statistical functionals in models for which developed statistical theory is insufficient or to assess finite sample properties of theoretical results. We show that the design of simulation experiments can be viewed from the perspective of causal intervention on a data generating mechanism. We then demonstrate the use of causal tools and frameworks in this context. Our perspective is agnostic to the particular domain of the simulation experiment which increases the potential impact of our proposed approach. In this paper, we consider two illustrative examples. First, we re-examine a predictive machine learning example from a popular textbook designed to assess the relationship between mean function complexity and the mean-squared error. Second, we discuss a traditional causal inference method problem, simulating the effect of unmeasured confounding on estimation, specifically to illustrate bias amplification. In both cases, applying causal principles and using graphical models with parameters and distributions as nodes in the spirit of influence diagrams can 1) make precise which estimand the simulation targets , 2) suggest modifications to better attain the simulation goals, and 3) provide scaffolding to discuss performance criteria for a particular simulation design.

Suggested Citation

  • Tyrel Stokes & Ian Shrier & Russell Steele, 2023. "Simulation Experiments as a Causal Problem," Papers 2308.10823, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2308.10823
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Carlos Cinelli & Chad Hazlett, 2020. "Making sense of sensitivity: extending omitted variable bias," Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B, Royal Statistical Society, vol. 82(1), pages 39-67, February.
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