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Comment
. 2014 Dec;19(4):482-7.
doi: 10.1037/met0000021.

Comment on Pearl: Practical implications of theoretical results for causal mediation analysis

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Comment

Comment on Pearl: Practical implications of theoretical results for causal mediation analysis

Kosuke Imai et al. Psychol Methods. 2014 Dec.

Erratum in

  • Correction to Imai et al. (2014).
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Psychol Methods. 2015 Mar;20(1):iii. doi: 10.1037/met0000035. Psychol Methods. 2015. PMID: 25822210 No abstract available.

Abstract

Mediation analysis has been extensively applied in psychological and other social science research. A number of methodologists have recently developed a formal theoretical framework for mediation analysis from a modern causal inference perspective. In Imai, Keele, and Tingley (2010), we have offered such an approach to causal mediation analysis that formalizes identification, estimation, and sensitivity analysis in a single framework. This approach has been used by a number of substantive researchers, and in subsequent work we have also further extended it to more complex settings and developed new research designs. In an insightful article, Pearl (2014) proposed an alternative approach that is based on a set of assumptions weaker than ours. In this comment, we demonstrate that the theoretical differences between our identification assumptions and his alternative conditions are likely to be of little practical relevance in the substantive research settings faced by most psychologists and other social scientists. We also show that our proposed estimation algorithms can be easily applied in the situations discussed in Pearl (2014). The methods discussed in this comment and many more are implemented via mediation, an open-source software (Tingley, Yamamoto, Hirose, Keele, & Imai, 2013).

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