English

The Do-Calculus Revisited

Artificial Intelligence 2012-10-19 v1 Methodology

Abstract

The do-calculus was developed in 1995 to facilitate the identification of causal effects in non-parametric models. The completeness proofs of [Huang and Valtorta, 2006] and [Shpitser and Pearl, 2006] and the graphical criteria of [Tian and Shpitser, 2010] have laid this identification problem to rest. Recent explorations unveil the usefulness of the do-calculus in three additional areas: mediation analysis [Pearl, 2012], transportability [Pearl and Bareinboim, 2011] and metasynthesis. Meta-synthesis (freshly coined) is the task of fusing empirical results from several diverse studies, conducted on heterogeneous populations and under different conditions, so as to synthesize an estimate of a causal relation in some target environment, potentially different from those under study. The talk surveys these results with emphasis on the challenges posed by meta-synthesis. For background material, see http://bayes.cs.ucla.edu/csl_papers.html

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1210.4852,
  title  = {The Do-Calculus Revisited},
  author = {Judea Pearl},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1210.4852},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

Appears in Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI2012)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T22:23:32.856Z