Why Did the Distribution Change?

Abstract

We describe a formal approach based on graphical causal models to identify the "root causes" of the change in the probability distribution of variables. After factorizing the joint distribution into conditional distributions of each variable, given its parents (the "causal mechanisms"), we attribute the change to changes of these causal mechanisms. This attribution analysis accounts for the fact that mechanisms often change independently and sometimes only some of them change. Through simulations, we study the performance of our distribution change attribution proposal. We then present a real-world case study identifying the drivers of the difference in the income distribution between men and women.

Cite

Text

Budhathoki et al. " Why Did the Distribution Change? ." Artificial Intelligence and Statistics, 2021.

Markdown

[Budhathoki et al. " Why Did the Distribution Change? ." Artificial Intelligence and Statistics, 2021.](https://mlanthology.org/aistats/2021/budhathoki2021aistats-distribution/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{budhathoki2021aistats-distribution,
  title     = {{ Why Did the Distribution Change? }},
  author    = {Budhathoki, Kailash and Janzing, Dominik and Bloebaum, Patrick and Ng, Hoiyi},
  booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Statistics},
  year      = {2021},
  pages     = {1666-1674},
  volume    = {130},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/aistats/2021/budhathoki2021aistats-distribution/}
}