Recanting twins: addressing intermediate confounding in mediation analysis
Tat-Thang Vo, Nicholas Williams, Richard Liu, Kara E. Rudolph, and, Ivan D{\i}az

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method called recanting twins for mediation analysis that effectively addresses intermediate confounding, ensuring causal parameters reflect individual-level mechanisms.
Contribution
It develops a new approach using recanting twins to identify natural path-specific effects under intermediate confounding, with efficient estimators and practical applications.
Findings
Recanting twins recover natural path-specific effects in absence of confounding.
The method provides valid causal effect estimates under standard causal models.
Application to Medicaid data illustrates the method's practical utility.
Abstract
The presence of intermediate confounders, also called recanting witnesses, is a fundamental challenge to the investigation of causal mechanisms in mediation analysis, preventing the identification of natural path-specific effects. Proposed alternative parameters (such as randomizational interventional effects) are problematic because they can be non-null even when there is no mediation for any individual in the population; i.e., they are not an average of underlying individual-level mechanisms. In this paper we develop a novel method for mediation analysis in settings with intermediate confounding, with guarantees that the causal parameters are summaries of the individual-level mechanisms of interest. The method is based on recently proposed ideas that view causality as the transfer of information, and thus replace recanting witnesses by draws from their conditional distribution, what…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Causal Inference Techniques · Cognitive Abilities and Testing
