English

Effect Aliasing in Observational Studies

Methodology 2024-08-30 v1

Abstract

In experimental design, aliasing of effects occurs in fractional factorial experiments, where certain low order factorial effects are indistinguishable from certain high order interactions: low order contrasts may be orthogonal to one another, while their higher order interactions are aliased and not identified. In observational studies, aliasing occurs when certain combinations of covariates -- e.g., time period and various eligibility criteria for treatment -- perfectly predict the treatment that an individual will receive, so a covariate combination is aliased with a particular treatment. In this situation, when a contrast among several groups is used to estimate a treatment effect, collections of individuals defined by contrast weights may be balanced with respect to summaries of low-order interactions between covariates and treatments, but necessarily not balanced with respect to summaries of high-order interactions between covariates and treatments. We develop a theory of aliasing in observational studies, illustrate that theory in an observational study whose aliasing is more robust than conventional difference-in-differences, and develop a new form of matching to construct balanced confounded factorial designs from observational data.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2408.16708,
  title  = {Effect Aliasing in Observational Studies},
  author = {Paul R. Rosenbaum and Jose R. Zubizarreta},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.16708},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:27:56.821Z