Empirical Tools Flashcards

1
Q

Correlation

A

when two variables move together
- useful for passive prediction

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2
Q

Causation

A

when one variable causes (or affects) another variable

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3
Q

Identification problem

A

the question of whether one variable causes another

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4
Q

Treatment variable

A

Di : the variable that generates the causal effect we’re interested in

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5
Q

Outcome Variable

A

Yi : the var. that is affected by the treatment variable

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6
Q

the concept of potential outcomes

A

The outcomes that a person would have under different values of the treatment

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7
Q

the individual treatment effect

A

The difference in i’s potential outcomes in the case in which i does v. doesn’t receive the treatment

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8
Q

the fundamental problem of casual interference

A

we can only ever observe one potential outcome per person. We can see i’s potential outcome in the observed state
- It is equal to the person’s realized outcome, Yi

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9
Q

Average treatment effect

A

the average of the individual treatment effects in a population

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10
Q

selection bias

A

when the selection of subjects into a study (or their likelihood of remaining in the study) leads to a result that is systematically different to the target population
- the difference in what average outcomes would be absent the treatment
- prevents us from identifying the average treatment effect

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11
Q

observed state

A

state we do observe

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12
Q

the counterfactual state

A

the state we do not observe

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13
Q

treatment group

A

those with Di = 1

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14
Q

control group

A

those with Di = 0

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15
Q

naive method

A

Compare outcomes for people who in the real world happened to get a treatment v. those for people who didn’t
- fails due to selection bias

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16
Q

randomized trial

A

the scientific term for an experiment
- In a rand. trial, the treatment, Di, is assigned via random chance

17
Q

Independence

A

the difference in avg. outcomes is the ATE

18
Q

Indirect Random Assignment

A

Randomly assign a variable that is related to, but not exactly the same as our variable of interest

19
Q

External Validity

A

results are valid only for the experiment’s participants
– The same experiment in U.S. and Sweden may generate different results
– But this suggests running lots of experiments and comparing them

20
Q

Attrition

A

When participants leave an experiment before it is complete
– If attrition is non-random, it can generate bias
-> Compare all of the treatment group with only some of the control
– Deal with attrition by finding a dataset with universal coverage
– apply for access to a database, instead of just conducting a survey

21
Q

Observational Data

A

Data that does not come from a deliberately designed experiment

22
Q

Time series

A

data on a particular variable over time

23
Q

Cross-sectional data

A

data on many people at one point in time

24
Q

Time-Series Analysis

A

the study of how series co-vary over time

25
Q

Cross-sectional regression

A

– the study of how variables co-vary across people
– A statistical method for studying how variables co-vary across people
– Both a model and an estimation strategy
– both a representation of how variables are related and a means of fitting that representation to the data

26
Q

With observational data, there is an ever-present threat of

A

bias

27
Q

Difference-in-Difference model

A

A strategy that applies when:
1. Treatment & control groups form an imperfect comparison
2. We have data on these groups over time

28
Q

Quasi-experiments

A

A naturally occurring situation that resembles an experiment
– A situation where a change in the economic/political environment creates
nearly identical treatment and control groups
– These T & C groups can then be used to measure a causal effect
– Often called “natural experiments” and often arise due to policy changes

29
Q

Imperfect Comparison

A

the difference in average outcomes contains bias

30
Q

Post-Period Difference

A

a non-experimental comparison of avg. outcomes
– the naive approach for recovering a treatment effect
– From before, δpst = ATE + bias(pst)

31
Q

Pre-period difference

A

just a bias term!
I δpre = bias(pre)
– Because no one has received the treatment yet

32
Q

Parallel trends assumption

A

assume that the bias is stable over time
– bias(pre) = bias(pst)
- The difference in average outcomes between T&C in the pre-period would have carried over to the post-period if the policy change had not occurred

33
Q

T&C is stable during the pre-period

A

– If it is, then can assume would continue to be stable into the post-period
– If it isn’t, then know DID is invalid. Look for a new strategy

34
Q

Regression Discontinuity

A

a situation where a person gets the treatment if above a cutoff but not if below

35
Q

Insight of the Regression Discontinuity design

A

people right around a cutoff are similar
– If people have imperfect control over their scores, then scoring just above / below the cutoff is nearly random
⇒ Treatment assignment is approx. random for people close to the cutoff
⇒ Can recover an ATE for these people, just as in a randomized trial

36
Q
  • However, we can’t see i’s potential outcome in the _____
A

counterfactual state & thus, we cant calculate the average treatment affect