English

Causal Effect Estimation under Networked Interference without Networked Unconfoundedness Assumption

Machine Learning 2026-01-28 v3

Abstract

Estimating causal effects under networked interference from observational data is a crucial yet challenging problem. Most existing methods mainly rely on the networked unconfoundedness assumption, which guarantees the identification of networked effects. However, this assumption is often violated due to the latent confounders inherent in observational data, thereby hindering the identification of networked effects. To address this issue, we leverage the rich interaction patterns between units in networks, which provide valuable information for recovering these latent confounders. Building on this insight, we develop a confounder recovery framework that explicitly characterizes three categories of latent confounders in networked settings: those affecting only the unit, those affecting only the unit's neighbors, and those influencing both. Based on this framework, we design a networked effect estimator using identifiable representation learning techniques. From a theoretical standpoint, we prove the identifiability of all three types of latent confounders and, by leveraging the recovered confounders, establish a formal identification result for networked effects. Extensive experiments validate our theoretical findings and demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2502.19741,
  title  = {Causal Effect Estimation under Networked Interference without Networked Unconfoundedness Assumption},
  author = {Weilin Chen and Ruichu Cai and Jie Qiao and Yuguang Yan and José Miguel Hernández-Lobato},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.19741},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2405.03342

R2 v1 2026-06-28T21:59:37.222Z