This paper discusses different needs and approaches to establishing "causation" that are relevant in legal cases involving statistical input based on epidemiological (or more generally observational or population-based) information. \ud \ud We distinguish between three versions of "cause": the first involves negligence in providing or allowing exposure, the second involves "cause" as it is shown through a scientifically proved increased risk of an outcome from the exposure in a population, and the third considers "cause" as it might apply to an individual plaintiff based on the first two. The population-oriented "cause" is that commonly addressed by statisticians, and we propose a variation on the Bradford Hill approach to testing such caus...
Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between...
Disputes over causes play a central role in legal argumentation and liability attribution. Legal app...
While statisticians and quantitative social scientists typically study the "effects of causes" (EoC)...
Abstract. This paper discusses different needs and approaches to establish-ing “causation ” that are...
This article summarizes a conceptual framework and simple mathematical methods of estimating the pro...
Many legal cases require decisions about causality, responsibility or blame, and these may be based ...
This article summarizes a conceptual framework and simple mathematical methods of estimating the pro...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
To establish causation, a tort plaintiff must show that it is more probable than not that the harm...
Causation in the law is an extremely complex issue which has vexed philosophers and legal scholars a...
This contribution claims that the two fundamental notions of causation at work in the health scienc...
In recent years the search for a proper formal definition of actual causation -- i.e., the relation ...
In comparative research, analysts conceptualize causation in contrasting ways when they pursue expla...
In a radical new account of causation in the Law, I argue that causation is a term we use to exp...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between...
Disputes over causes play a central role in legal argumentation and liability attribution. Legal app...
While statisticians and quantitative social scientists typically study the "effects of causes" (EoC)...
Abstract. This paper discusses different needs and approaches to establish-ing “causation ” that are...
This article summarizes a conceptual framework and simple mathematical methods of estimating the pro...
Many legal cases require decisions about causality, responsibility or blame, and these may be based ...
This article summarizes a conceptual framework and simple mathematical methods of estimating the pro...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
To establish causation, a tort plaintiff must show that it is more probable than not that the harm...
Causation in the law is an extremely complex issue which has vexed philosophers and legal scholars a...
This contribution claims that the two fundamental notions of causation at work in the health scienc...
In recent years the search for a proper formal definition of actual causation -- i.e., the relation ...
In comparative research, analysts conceptualize causation in contrasting ways when they pursue expla...
In a radical new account of causation in the Law, I argue that causation is a term we use to exp...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between...
Disputes over causes play a central role in legal argumentation and liability attribution. Legal app...
While statisticians and quantitative social scientists typically study the "effects of causes" (EoC)...