| Literature DB >> 34232865 |
Rune Christiansen, Niklas Pfister, Martin Emil Jakobsen, Nicola Gnecco, Jonas Peters.
Abstract
We consider the problem of predicting a response Y from a set of covariates X when test- and training distributions differ. Since such differences may have causal explanations, we consider test distributions that emerge from interventions in a structural causal model, and focus on minimizing the worst-case risk. Causal regression models, which regress the response on its direct causes, remain unchanged under arbitrary interventions on the covariates, but they are not always optimal in the above sense. For example, for linear models and bounded interventions, alternative solutions have been shown to be minimax prediction optimal. We introduce the formal framework of distribution generalization that allows us to analyze the above problem in partially observed nonlinear models for both direct interventions on X and interventions that occur indirectly via exogenous variables A. It takes into account that, in practice, minimax solutions need to be identified from data. Our framework allows us to characterize under which class of interventions the causal function is minimax optimal. We prove sufficient conditions for distribution generalization and present corresponding impossibility results. We propose a practical method, NILE, that achieves distribution generalization in a nonlinear IV setting with linear extrapolation. We prove consistency and present empirical results.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34232865 DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2021.3094760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ISSN: 0098-5589 Impact factor: 9.322