Consider a policymaker who wants to decide which intervention to perform in order to change a currently undesirable situation. The policymaker has at her disposal a team of experts, each with their own understanding of the causal dependencies between different factors contributing to the outcome. The policymaker has varying degrees of confidence in the experts’ opinions. She wants to combine their opinions in order to decide on the most effective intervention. We formally define the notion of an effective intervention, and then consider how experts’ causal judgments can be combined in order to determine the most effective intervention. We define a notion of two causal models being compatible, and show how compatible causal models can be com...
According to the causal powers theory, all causal relations are understood in terms of causal powers...
When two possible causes of an outcome are under consideration, contingency information concerns eac...
Contains fulltext : 173902.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Normative causa...
Consider a policymaker who wants to decide which intervention to perform in order to change a curren...
This dissertation studies how the mechanism-based view of causality can assist in construction and u...
Decision making typically requires judgments about causal relations: we need to know the causal effe...
Decision making typically requires judgements about causal relations: we need to know both the causa...
International audienceDecision making typically requires judgments about causal relations: we need t...
We investigate how people use causal knowledge to design interventions to affect the outcomes of cau...
Expert judgment (or expert elicitation) is a formal process for eliciting judgments from subject-mat...
Judging an act’s causal efficacy plays a crucial role in causal decision theory. A recent developmen...
Decision makers have long relied on experts to inform their decision making. Expert judgment analysi...
Clark Glymour, together with his students Peter Spirtes and Richard Scheines, did pioneering work on...
Commentaires de cet article disponibles à partir de la page : http://www.projecteuclid.org/euclid.ba...
When evaluating the efficacy of causal candidates, peoples' judgments may be influenced by both the ...
According to the causal powers theory, all causal relations are understood in terms of causal powers...
When two possible causes of an outcome are under consideration, contingency information concerns eac...
Contains fulltext : 173902.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Normative causa...
Consider a policymaker who wants to decide which intervention to perform in order to change a curren...
This dissertation studies how the mechanism-based view of causality can assist in construction and u...
Decision making typically requires judgments about causal relations: we need to know the causal effe...
Decision making typically requires judgements about causal relations: we need to know both the causa...
International audienceDecision making typically requires judgments about causal relations: we need t...
We investigate how people use causal knowledge to design interventions to affect the outcomes of cau...
Expert judgment (or expert elicitation) is a formal process for eliciting judgments from subject-mat...
Judging an act’s causal efficacy plays a crucial role in causal decision theory. A recent developmen...
Decision makers have long relied on experts to inform their decision making. Expert judgment analysi...
Clark Glymour, together with his students Peter Spirtes and Richard Scheines, did pioneering work on...
Commentaires de cet article disponibles à partir de la page : http://www.projecteuclid.org/euclid.ba...
When evaluating the efficacy of causal candidates, peoples' judgments may be influenced by both the ...
According to the causal powers theory, all causal relations are understood in terms of causal powers...
When two possible causes of an outcome are under consideration, contingency information concerns eac...
Contains fulltext : 173902.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Normative causa...