Summary. The identification of causal peer effects (also known as social contagion or induction) from observational data in social networks is challenged by two distinct sources of bias: latent homophily and unobserved confounding. In this paper, we investigate how causal peer effects of traits and behaviors can be identified using genes (or other structurally isomorphic variables) as instrumental variables (IV) in a large set of data generating models with homophily and confounding. We use directed acyclic graphs to represent these models and employ multiple IV strategies and report three main identification results. First, using a single fixed gene (or allele) as an IV will generally fail to identify peer effects if the gene affects past ...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...
Demonstrating compelling causal evidence of the existence and strength of peer to peer influence in ...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...
Summary. The identification of causal peer effects (also known as social contagion or induction) fro...
We consider processes on social networks that can potentially involve three factors: homophily, or t...
The authors consider processes on social networks that can potentially involve three factors: homoph...
Current tests for contagion in social network studies are vulnerable to the confounding ef-fects of ...
An increasing number of scholars are using longitudinal social net-work data to try to obtain estima...
Individual outcomes are highly correlated with group average outcomes, a fact often interpreted as a...
© 2020 American Statistical Association. Peer effects, in which an individual’s behavior is affected...
There has been a considerable amount of interest in the empirical investigation of social influence ...
We provide new results regarding the identification of peer effects. We consider an extended version...
After product adoption, consumers make decisions about continued use. These choices can be influence...
A recurrent problem in the analysis of behavioral dynamics, given a simultaneously evolving social n...
This paper presents a novel method to identify peer effects through exploiting fluctuations in the v...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...
Demonstrating compelling causal evidence of the existence and strength of peer to peer influence in ...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...
Summary. The identification of causal peer effects (also known as social contagion or induction) fro...
We consider processes on social networks that can potentially involve three factors: homophily, or t...
The authors consider processes on social networks that can potentially involve three factors: homoph...
Current tests for contagion in social network studies are vulnerable to the confounding ef-fects of ...
An increasing number of scholars are using longitudinal social net-work data to try to obtain estima...
Individual outcomes are highly correlated with group average outcomes, a fact often interpreted as a...
© 2020 American Statistical Association. Peer effects, in which an individual’s behavior is affected...
There has been a considerable amount of interest in the empirical investigation of social influence ...
We provide new results regarding the identification of peer effects. We consider an extended version...
After product adoption, consumers make decisions about continued use. These choices can be influence...
A recurrent problem in the analysis of behavioral dynamics, given a simultaneously evolving social n...
This paper presents a novel method to identify peer effects through exploiting fluctuations in the v...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...
Demonstrating compelling causal evidence of the existence and strength of peer to peer influence in ...
Original revised version - Groningen, December 15, 2006 A recurrent problem in the analysis of behav...