High-Dimensional Methods and Inference on Structural and Treatment Effects
Duke University · University of Illinois Chicago · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Data with a large number of variables relative to the sample size—“high-dimensional data”—are readily available and increasingly common in empirical economics. Highdimensional data arise through a combination of two phenomena. First, the data may be inherently high dimensional in that many different characteristics per observation are available. For example, the US Census collects information on hundreds of individual characteristics and scanner datasets record transaction-level data for households across a wide range of products. Second, even when the number of available variables is relatively small, researchers rarely know the exact functional form with which the small number of variables enter the model of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 54
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Overfitting
- Computer science
- Inference
- Sample (material)
- Data mining
- Sample size determination
- Range (aeronautics)
- Predictive power