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Identifying Total Causal Effects in Linear Models Under Partial Homoscedasticity

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Mathias Drton

Prof. Dr.

Principal Investigator

Abstract

A fundamental challenge of scientific research is inferring causal relations based on observed data. One commonly used approach involves utilizing structural causal models that postulate noisy functional relations among interacting variables. A directed graph naturally represents these models and reflects the underlying causal structure. However, classical identifiability results suggest that, without conducting additional experiments, this causal graph can only be identified up to a Markov equivalence class of indistinguishable models. Recent research has shown that focusing on linear relations with equal error variances can enable the identification of the causal structure from mere observational data. Nonetheless, practitioners are often primarily interested in the effects of specific interventions, rendering the complete identification of the causal structure unnecessary. In this work, we investigate the extent to which less restrictive assumptions of partial homoscedasticity are sufficient for identifying the causal effects of interest. Furthermore, we construct mathematically rigorous confidence regions for total causal effects under structure uncertainty and explore the performance gain of relying on stricter error assumptions in a simulation study.

article


International Journal of Approximate Reasoning

183.109455. Aug. 2025.
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Authors

D. StriederM. Drton

Links

DOI

Research Area

 A1 | Statistical Foundations & Explainability

BibTeXKey: SD25

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