Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8919529 | Econometrics and Statistics | 2017 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
Causal inference from observational data is an ambitious but highly relevant task, with diverse applications ranging from natural to social sciences. Within the scope of nonparametric time series, causal inference defined through interventions is largely unexplored, although time order simplifies the problem substantially. A marginal integration scheme is considered for inferring causal effects from observational time series data, MINT-T (marginal integration in time series), which is an adaptation for time series of a previously proposed method for the case of independent data. This approach for stationary stochastic processes is fully nonparametric and, assuming no instantaneous effects consistently recovers the total causal effect of a single intervention with optimal one-dimensional nonparametric convergence rate nâ2/5 assuming regularity conditions and twice differentiability of a certain corresponding regression function. Therefore, MINT-T remains largely unaffected by the curse of dimensionality as long as smoothness conditions hold in higher dimensions and it is feasible for a large class of stationary time series, including nonlinear and multivariate processes. For the case with instantaneous effects, we provide a procedure which guards against false positive causal statements.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Statistics and Probability
Authors
Shu Li, Jan Ernest, Peter Bühlmann,