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14 - The Bias Due to Incomplete Matching

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Donald B. Rubin
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
Paul R. Rosenbaum
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
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Summary

Abstract: Observational studies comparing groups of treated and control units are often used to estimate the effects caused by treatments. Matching is a method for sampling a large reservoir of potential controls to produce a control group of modest size that is ostensibly similar to the treated group. In practice, there is a trade-off between the desires to find matches for all treated units and to obtain matched treated–control pairs that are extremely similar to each other. We derive expressions for the bias in the average matched pair difference due to (i) the failure to match all treated units – incomplete matching, and (ii) the failure to obtain exact matches – inexact matching. A practical example shows that the bias due to incomplete matching can be severe, and moreover, can be avoided entirely by using an appropriate multivariate nearest available matching algorithm, which, in the example, leaves only a small residual bias due to inexact matching.

INTRODUCTION

The Effects Caused by Treatments

A treatment is an intervention that can, in principle, be given to or withheld from any experimental unit under study. With an experimental treatment and a control treatment, each unit has two potential responses: a response r1 that would be observed if the unit received the experimental treatment, and a response r0 that would be observed if the unit received the control treatment.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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