Back-door path: Difference between revisions
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==Examples== | ==Examples== | ||
<math>X \leftarrow Z \to Y</math> is a back-door path from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>. | * <math>X \leftarrow Z \to Y</math> is a back-door path from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>: it is indirect (involves <math>Z</math>) and has an arrow into <math>X</math> (from <math>Z</math>). | ||
* <math>X \to Z \leftarrow W \to Y</math> is not a back-door path from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>: it is an indirect path but there is no arrow into <math>X</math>. | |||
<math>X \to Z \leftarrow W \to Y</math> is not a back-door path from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>: it is an indirect path but there is no arrow into <math>X</math>. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Causal inference]] | |||
Latest revision as of 04:35, 16 January 2019
A back-door path in a causal graph is an indirect path with an arrow into the treatment/causal variable.
Formally, given a graph with nodes including (treatment/causal variable) and (outcome variable), a direct path from to is just a directed edge . An indirect path from to is some traversal of edges from to that isn't a direct path. Importantly, the edges don't have to be pointed in the "right way", so is an indirect path. A back-door path is an indirect path with an arrow into .
"a back-door path is defined as any path between the causal variable and the outcome variable that begins with an arrow that points to the causal variable" (p. 30).[1] So this definition doesn't mention indirect paths, but I guess it's implied, because a direct path from the outcome variable to the causal variable would mean that the causal variable isn't really a causal variable?
Examples
- is a back-door path from to : it is indirect (involves ) and has an arrow into (from ).
- is not a back-door path from to : it is an indirect path but there is no arrow into .
References
- ↑ Stephen L. Morgan; Christopher Winship. Counterfactual and Causal Inference: Methods and Principles for Social Research. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press. 2015.