The research questions that motivate most quantitative studies in the health, social and behavioral sciences are not statistical but causal in nature. For example, what is the efficacy of a given drug in a given population? Whether data can prove an employer guilty of hiring discrimination? What fraction of past crimes could have been avoided by a given policy? What was the cause of death of a given individual, in a specific incident? These are causal questions because they require some knowledge of the data-generating process; they cannot be computed from the data alone.


Pearl, Judea (2008) "Causal Inference," in: Pearl, Judea. The science and ethics of causal modeling. (2010).


The research questions that motivate most quantitative studies in the health, social and behavioral sciences are not statistical but causal in...

The research questions that motivate most quantitative studies in the health, social and behavioral sciences are not statistical but causal in...

The research questions that motivate most quantitative studies in the health, social and behavioral sciences are not statistical but causal in...

The research questions that motivate most quantitative studies in the health, social and behavioral sciences are not statistical but causal in...