articleEpidemiologyMay 24, 2006Closed access

Instruments for Causal Inference

Harvard University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The use of instrumental variable (IV) methods is attractive because, even in the presence of unmeasured confounding, such methods may consistently estimate the average causal effect of an exposure on an outcome. However, for this consistent estimation to be achieved, several strong conditions must hold. We review the definition of an instrumental variable, describe the conditions required to obtain consistent estimates of causal effects, and explore their implications in the context of a recent application of the instrumental variables approach. We also present (1) a description of the connection between 4 causal models-counterfactuals, causal directed acyclic graphs, nonparametric structural equation models,…

Citation impact

972
total citations
FWCI
17.69
Percentile
100%
References
47
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Instrumental variable
  • Causal inference
  • Causal model
  • Econometrics
  • Counterfactual conditional
  • Confounding
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Structural equation modeling
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