Causal mediation analysis for stochastic interventions

9 Jan 2019  ·  Iván Díaz, Nima Hejazi ·

Mediation analysis in causal inference has traditionally focused on binary treatment regimes and deterministic interventions, and a decomposition of the average treatment effect in terms of direct and indirect effects. In this paper we present an analogous decomposition of the \textit{population intervention effect}, defined through stochastic interventions. Population intervention effects provide a generalized framework in which a variety of interesting causal contrasts can be defined, including effects for continuous and categorical exposures. We show that identification of direct and indirect effects for the population intervention effect requires weaker assumptions than its average treatment effect counterpart. In particular, identification of direct effects is guaranteed in experiments that randomize the treatment and the mediator. We discuss various estimators of the direct and indirect effects, including substitution, re-weighted, and efficient estimators based on flexible regression techniques. Our efficient estimator is asymptotically linear under a condition requiring $n^{1/4}$-consistency of certain regression functions. We perform a simulation study in which we assess the finite-sample properties of our proposed estimators. We present the results of an illustrative study where we assess the effect of participation in a sports team on BMI among children, using mediators such as exercise habits, daily consumption of snacks, and overweight status.

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