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Poster
in
Workshop: Beyond Bayes: Paths Towards Universal Reasoning Systems

P13: Estimating Categorical Counterfactuals via Deep Twin Networks

Alexander Fabian Spies


Abstract:

Authors: Athanasios Vlontzos, Bernhard Kainz, CiarĂ¡n Mark Gilligan-Lee

Abstract: Counterfactual inference is a powerful tool, capable of solving challenging problems in high-profile sectors. To perform counterfactual inference, one requires knowledge of the underlying causal mechanisms. However, causal mechanisms cannot be uniquely determined from observations and interventions alone. This raises the question of how to choose the causal mechanisms so that resulting counterfactual inference is trustworthy in a given domain. This question has been addressed in causal models with binary variables, but the case of categorical variables remains unanswered. We address this challenge by introducing for causal models with categorical variables the notion of \emph{counterfactual ordering}, a principle that posits desirable properties causal mechanisms should posses, and prove that it is equivalent to specific functional constraints on the causal mechanisms. To learn causal mechanisms satisfying these constraints, and perform counterfactual inference with them, we introduce \emph{deep twin networks}. These are deep neural networks that, when trained, are capable of \emph{twin network} counterfactual inference---an alternative to the \emph{abduction, action, \& prediction} method. We empirically test our approach on diverse real-world and semi-synthetic data from medicine, epidemiology, and finance, reporting accurate estimation of counterfactual probabilities while demonstrating the issues that arise with counterfactual reasoning when counterfactual ordering is not enforced.

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