Probability trees and the value of a single intervention
The most fundamental problem in statistical causality is determining causal relationships from limited data. Probability trees, which combine prior causal structures with Bayesian updates, have been suggested as a possible solution. In this work, we quantify the information gain from a single interv...
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Zusammenfassung: | The most fundamental problem in statistical causality is determining causal
relationships from limited data. Probability trees, which combine prior causal
structures with Bayesian updates, have been suggested as a possible solution.
In this work, we quantify the information gain from a single intervention and
show that both the anticipated information gain, prior to making an
intervention, and the expected gain from an intervention have simple
expressions. This results in an active-learning method that simply selects the
intervention with the highest anticipated gain, which we illustrate through
several examples. Our work demonstrates how probability trees, and Bayesian
estimation of their parameters, offer a simple yet viable approach to fast
causal induction. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2205.08779 |