Causal Effect Inference with Deep Latent-Variable Models
                                            conference paper
                                        
                                    
                                            Learning individual-level causal effects from observational data, such as inferring the most effective medication for a specific patient, is a problem of growing importance for policy makers. The most important aspect of inferring causal effects from observational data is the handling of confounders, factors that affect both an intervention and its outcome. A carefully designed observational study attempts to measure all important confounders. However, even if one does not have direct access to all confounders, there may exist noisy and uncertain measurement of proxies for confounders. We build on recent advances in latent variable modeling to simultaneously estimate the unknown latent space summarizing the confounders and the causal effect. Our method is based on Variational Autoencoders (VAE) which follow the causal structure of inference with proxies. We show our method is significantly more robust than existing methods, and matches the state-of-the-art on previous benchmarks focused on individual treatment effects
                                        
                                    TNO Identifier
                                        
                                            782555
                                        
                                    Source title
                                        
                                            31st Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS 2017), Long Beach, CA, USA.
                                        
                                    Files
                                        
                                            
                                                To receive the publication files, please send an e-mail request to TNO Repository.