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      Reconciling Causality and Statistics

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          Abstract

          Statisticians have warned us since the early days of their discipline that experimental correlation between two observations by no means implies the existence of a causal relation. The question about what clues exist in observational data that could informs us about the existence of such causal relations is nevertheless more that legitimate. It lies actually at the root of any scientific endeavor. For decades however the only accepted method among statisticians to elucidate causal relationships was the so called Randomized Controlled Trial. Besides this notorious exception causality questions remained largely taboo for many. One reason for this state of affairs was the lack of an appropriate mathematical framework to formulate such questions in an unambiguous way. Fortunately thinks have changed these last years with the advent of the so called Causality Revolution initiated by Judea Pearl and coworkers. The aim of this pedagogical paper is to present their ideas and methods in a compact and self-contained fashion with concrete business examples as illustrations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          08 July 2020
          Article
          2007.03940
          e44848fe-19b6-4f7c-8b0e-b19b2003cad0

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          62-01 (Primary) 62-02, 62A09 (Secondary)
          22 pages, 14 figures
          cs.AI math.ST stat.TH

          Artificial intelligence,Statistics theory
          Artificial intelligence, Statistics theory

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