Statistical Models and Causal Inference
A Dialogue with the Social Sciences
- Author: David A. Freedman
- Editors:
- David Collier, University of California, Berkeley
- Jasjeet S. Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley
- Philip B. Stark, University of California, Berkeley
- Date Published: February 2010
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521123907
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David A. Freedman presents here a definitive synthesis of his approach to causal inference in the social sciences. He explores the foundations and limitations of statistical modeling, illustrating basic arguments with examples from political science, public policy, law, and epidemiology. Freedman maintains that many new technical approaches to statistical modeling constitute not progress, but regress. Instead, he advocates a 'shoe leather' methodology, which exploits natural variation to mitigate confounding and relies on intimate knowledge of the subject matter to develop meticulous research designs and eliminate rival explanations. When Freedman first enunciated this position, he was met with scepticism, in part because it was hard to believe that a mathematical statistician of his stature would favor 'low-tech' approaches. But the tide is turning. Many social scientists now agree that statistical technique cannot substitute for good research design and subject matter knowledge. This book offers an integrated presentation of Freedman's views.
Read more- Collects in one place many of Freedman's most important works
- Freedman's work challenges the assumptions of statistical research in social science, public policy, law, and epidemiology
- Addresses issues of current concern, including swine flu vaccine, earthquake prediction, and statistical adjustments to the US census
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×Product details
- Date Published: February 2010
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521123907
- length: 416 pages
- dimensions: 239 x 163 x 23 mm
- weight: 0.64kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Editors' introduction: inference and shoe leather
Part I. Statistical Modeling: Foundations and Limitations:
1. Some issues in the foundations of statistics: probability and model validation
2. Statistical assumptions as empirical commitments
3. Statistical models and shoe leather
Part II. Studies in Political Science, Public Policy, and Epidemiology:
4. Methods for Census 2000 and statistical adjustments
5. On 'solutions' to the ecological inference problem
6. Rejoinder to King
7. Black ravens, white shoes, and case selection: inference with categorical variables
8. What is the chance of an earthquake?
9. Salt and blood pressure: conventional wisdom reconsidered
10. The Swine Flu vaccine and Guillain-Barré Syndrome: relative risk and specific causation
11. Survival analysis: an epidemiological hazard?
Part III. New Developments: Progress or Regress?:
12. On regression adjustments in experiments with several treatments
13. Randomization does not justify logistic regression
14. The grand leap
15. On specifying graphical models for causation, and the identification problem
16. Weighting regressions by propensity scores
17. On the so-called 'Huber sandwich estimator' and 'robust standard errors'
18. Endogeneity in probit response models
19. Diagnostics cannot have much power against general alternatives
Part IV. Shoe Leather, Revisited:
20. On types of scientific inquiry: the role of quantitative reasoning.Instructors have used or reviewed this title for the following courses
- Advanced Quantitative Methods I
- Advanced Regression and Program Evaluation Methods
- Advanced Statistical Modeling
- Analyse quantitative
- Applied Quantitative Data Analysis
- Canadian Political Science: A Survey of the Field
- Causality and graphical Markov models
- Data Analysis 1
- Evaluation Research
- Intermediate Statistics for social and behavioral sciences
- Methods for Cross-National Research
- Probability & Statistics
- Qualitative Methods and Research Design
- Research Methods ll
- Social Statistics Part ll
- Special Topices in Contemporary American Politics
- Statistical Methods ll
- Undergraduate Statistics
- Uses of Intermediate Statistical Methods in Political Science
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