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An Introduction to the Theory of Observational Studies / by Paul R. Rosenbaum.

Springer Nature - Springer Mathematics and Statistics (R0) eBooks 2025 English International Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Rosenbaum, Paul R.
Series:
Springer Texts in Statistics, 2197-4136
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Quantitative research.
Statistics.
Social sciences--Statistical methods.
Social sciences.
Epidemiology.
Data Analysis and Big Data.
Statistical Theory and Methods.
Statistics in Social Sciences, Humanities, Law, Education, Behavorial Sciences, Public Policy.
Local Subjects:
Data Analysis and Big Data.
Statistical Theory and Methods.
Statistics in Social Sciences, Humanities, Law, Education, Behavorial Sciences, Public Policy.
Epidemiology.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (709 pages)
Edition:
1st ed. 2025.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland : Imprint: Springer, 2025.
Summary:
This book is an introduction to the theory of causal inference in observational studies. An observational study draws inferences about the effects caused by treatments or preventable exposures when randomized experimentation is unethical or infeasible. An observational study is distinguished from an experiment by the problems that follow from the absence of randomized assignment of individuals to treatments. Observational studies are common in most fields that study the effects of treatments or policies on people, including public health and epidemiology, economics and public policy, medicine and clinical psychology, and criminology and empirical legal studies. After Part I reviews causal inference in randomized experiments, the twelve short chapters in Parts II, III and IV introduce modern topics: the propensity score, ignorable treatment assignment, the principal unobserved covariate, algorithms for optimal matching, randomized reassignment techniques for appraising the covariate balance achieved by matching, covariance adjustment, sensitivity analysis, design sensitivity, ways to design an observational study to be insensitive to larger unmeasured biases, the large sample efficiency of a sensitivity analysis, quasi-experimental devices that provide observable information about unmeasured biases, evidence factors and complementary analyses to address unmeasured biases. The book is accessible to anyone who has completed an undergraduate course in mathematical statistics. The subject is developed with the aid of two simple empirical examples concerning the health benefits or harms caused by consuming alcohol. The data for these examples and their reanalyses are freely available in an R package, iTOS, associated with Introduction to the Theory of Observational Studies.
Contents:
Preface
Part I First Steps
1. Examples of Observational Studies
2. Causal Inference in Randomized Experiments
3. Some Background Topics in Statistics
Part II Adjustments for Observed Covariates
4. Propensity Scores and Ignorable Treatment Assignment
5. Algorithms for Matching
6. Evaluating the Balance of Observed Covariates
7. Covariance Adjustment
Part III Sensitivity of Inferences to Covariates That Were Not Observed
8. Sensitivity of Causal Inferences to Unmeasured Biases in Treatment Assignment
9. Design Sensitivity and the Choice of Statistical Methods
10. Study Design and Design Sensitivity
11. Efficiency of Sensitivity Analyses
Part IV Quasi-experimental Devices
12. Known Effects in Observational Studies
13. Evidence Factors for Two Control Groups
14. Tightened Blocks for Complementary Analyses
15. A Look Back Along the Path Taken
Some Books and Articles About Causal Inference
Notation
Solutions to Selected Problems
Some Comments for Instructors
Index.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
ISBN:
9783031904943
OCLC:
1527722674

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