Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

An Invitation to Causal Inference in Environmental Psychology

View through CrossRef
This chapter introduces causal inference within environmental psychology, underscoring its fundamental differences from traditional statistical analysis. The content is organised into four main sections: 1. Non-technical introduction. Stating a causal question requires defining pre-specified contrasts between interventions experienced by an entire population. Because each individual can experience only one intervention, causal effects must be estimated using assumptions. We build intuitions for these assumptions by clarifying their satisfaction in randomised controlled experiments. 2. Causal Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) tutorial. Causal DAGs are potent tools for clarifying whether and how causal effects may be identified from data. We explain how they work. 3. Practical examples. We apply causal DAGs to common scenarios in observational environmental psychology. 4.Guidelines. The main aim of this chapter is to motivate broader adoption of causal workflows.
Center for Open Science
Title: An Invitation to Causal Inference in Environmental Psychology
Description:
This chapter introduces causal inference within environmental psychology, underscoring its fundamental differences from traditional statistical analysis.
The content is organised into four main sections: 1.
Non-technical introduction.
Stating a causal question requires defining pre-specified contrasts between interventions experienced by an entire population.
Because each individual can experience only one intervention, causal effects must be estimated using assumptions.
We build intuitions for these assumptions by clarifying their satisfaction in randomised controlled experiments.
2.
Causal Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) tutorial.
Causal DAGs are potent tools for clarifying whether and how causal effects may be identified from data.
We explain how they work.
3.
Practical examples.
We apply causal DAGs to common scenarios in observational environmental psychology.
4.
Guidelines.
The main aim of this chapter is to motivate broader adoption of causal workflows.

Related Results

Invitation or Sexual Harassment?
Invitation or Sexual Harassment?
This article aims to analyse an intercultural telephone invitation given by a Chinese tutor to an Australian student, and highlight general principles of intercultural invitations....
Causal discovery and prediction: methods and algorithms
Causal discovery and prediction: methods and algorithms
(English) This thesis focuses on the discovery of causal relations and on the prediction of causal effects. Regarding causal discovery, this thesis introduces a novel and generic m...
A Practical Guide to Causal Inference in Three-Wave Panel Studies
A Practical Guide to Causal Inference in Three-Wave Panel Studies
Causal inference from observational data poses considerable challenges. This guide explains an approach to estimating causal effects using panel data focussing on the three-wave pa...
HISTORY ОF CHINESE PSYCHOLOGY: OVERVIEW
HISTORY ОF CHINESE PSYCHOLOGY: OVERVIEW
Background. Th is material will be very useful for Russian scientists, as it will allow them to evaluate the achievements of Chinese psychology. Th e authors of the article believe...
Operational decision-making with machine learning and causal inference
Operational decision-making with machine learning and causal inference
Optimizing operational decisions, routine actions within some business or operational process, is a key challenge across a variety of domains and application areas. The increasing ...
Evolutionary Grammatical Inference
Evolutionary Grammatical Inference
Grammatical Inference (also known as grammar induction) is the problem of learning a grammar for a language from a set of examples. In a broad sense, some data is presented to the ...
Identifying drivers of river floods using causal inference
Identifying drivers of river floods using causal inference
River floods are among the most devastating natural hazards, causing thousands of deaths and billions of euros in damages every year. Floods can result from a combination of compou...
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
ABSTRACTOn a global and regional scale, Indonesia has one of the least environmentally sustainable economies in the Asia-Pacific region. Consumption is one of the key factors contr...

Back to Top