4.3 Article

Counterfactual Graphical Models for Longitudinal Mediation Analysis With Unobserved Confounding

期刊

COGNITIVE SCIENCE
卷 37, 期 6, 页码 1011-1035

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cogs.12058

关键词

Causal inference; Counterfactuals; Mediation analysis; Longitudinal studies; Direct and indirect effects; Path-specific effects; Graphical models

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Questions concerning mediated causal effects are of great interest in psychology, cognitive science, medicine, social science, public health, and many other disciplines. For instance, about 60% of recent papers published in leading journals in social psychology contain at least one mediation test (Rucker, Preacher, Tormala, & Petty, 2011). Standard parametric approaches to mediation analysis employ regression models, and either the difference method (Judd & Kenny, 1981), more common in epidemiology, or the product method (Baron & Kenny, 1986), more common in the social sciences. In this article, we first discuss a known, but perhaps often unappreciated, fact that these parametric approaches are a special case of a general counterfactual framework for reasoning about causality first described by Neyman (1923) and Rubin (1924) and linked to causal graphical models by Robins (1986) and Pearl (2006). We then show a number of advantages of this framework. First, it makes the strong assumptions underlying mediation analysis explicit. Second, it avoids a number of problems present in the product and difference methods, such as biased estimates of effects in certain cases. Finally, we show the generality of this framework by proving a novel result which allows mediation analysis to be applied to longitudinal settings with unobserved confounders.

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