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 nonlinear additive noise model


iSCAN: Identifying Causal Mechanism Shifts among Nonlinear Additive Noise Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

Structural causal models (SCMs) are widely used in various disciplines to represent causal relationships among variables in complex systems.Unfortunately, the underlying causal structure is often unknown, and estimating it from data remains a challenging task. In many situations, however, the end goal is to localize the changes (shifts) in the causal mechanisms between related datasets instead of learning the full causal structure of the individual datasets. Some applications include root cause analysis, analyzing gene regulatory network structure changes between healthy and cancerous individuals, or explaining distribution shifts.


Hybrid Top-Down Global Causal Discovery with Local Search for Linear and Nonlinear Additive Noise Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

Learning the unique directed acyclic graph corresponding to an unknown causal model is a challenging task. Methods based on functional causal models can identify a unique graph, but either suffer from the curse of dimensionality or impose strong parametric assumptions. To address these challenges, we propose a novel hybrid approach for global causal discovery in observational data that leverages local causal substructures. We first present a topological sorting algorithm that leverages ancestral relationships in linear structural causal models to establish a compact top-down hierarchical ordering, encoding more causal information than linear orderings produced by existing methods. We demonstrate that this approach generalizes to nonlinear settings with arbitrary noise.


iSCAN: Identifying Causal Mechanism Shifts among Nonlinear Additive Noise Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

Structural causal models (SCMs) are widely used in various disciplines to represent causal relationships among variables in complex systems.Unfortunately, the underlying causal structure is often unknown, and estimating it from data remains a challenging task. In many situations, however, the end goal is to localize the changes (shifts) in the causal mechanisms between related datasets instead of learning the full causal structure of the individual datasets. Some applications include root cause analysis, analyzing gene regulatory network structure changes between healthy and cancerous individuals, or explaining distribution shifts.


iSCAN: Identifying Causal Mechanism Shifts among Nonlinear Additive Noise Models

Neural Information Processing Systems

Structural causal models (SCMs) are widely used in various disciplines to represent causal relationships among variables in complex systems.Unfortunately, the underlying causal structure is often unknown, and estimating it from data remains a challenging task. In many situations, however, the end goal is to localize the changes (shifts) in the causal mechanisms between related datasets instead of learning the full causal structure of the individual datasets. Some applications include root cause analysis, analyzing gene regulatory network structure changes between healthy and cancerous individuals, or explaining distribution shifts.