Causal inference on human behaviour

Making causal inferences regarding human behaviour is difficult given the complex interplay between countless contributors to behaviour, including factors in the external world and our internal states. We provide a non-technical conceptual overview of challenges and opportunities for causal inferenc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature human behaviour 2024-08, Vol.8 (8), p.1448-1459
Hauptverfasser: Bailey, Drew H., Jung, Alexander J., Beltz, Adriene M., Eronen, Markus I., Gische, Christian, Hamaker, Ellen L., Kording, Konrad P., Lebel, Catherine, Lindquist, Martin A., Moeller, Julia, Razi, Adeel, Rohrer, Julia M., Zhang, Baobao, Murayama, Kou
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Making causal inferences regarding human behaviour is difficult given the complex interplay between countless contributors to behaviour, including factors in the external world and our internal states. We provide a non-technical conceptual overview of challenges and opportunities for causal inference on human behaviour. The challenges include our ambiguous causal language and thinking, statistical under- or over-control, effect heterogeneity, interference, timescales of effects and complex treatments. We explain how methods optimized for addressing one of these challenges frequently exacerbate other problems. We thus argue that clearly specified research questions are key to improving causal inference from data. We suggest a triangulation approach that compares causal estimates from (quasi-)experimental research with causal estimates generated from observational data and theoretical assumptions. This approach allows a systematic investigation of theoretical and methodological factors that might lead estimates to converge or diverge across studies. In this Review, Drew Bailey et al. present an accessible, non-technical overview of key challenges for causal inference in studies of human behaviour as well as methodological solutions to these challenges.
ISSN:2397-3374
2397-3374
DOI:10.1038/s41562-024-01939-z