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Comment: Understanding Simpson’s Paradox

  • Paper
  • Feb, 2014
  • #Math #Statistics
Judea Pearl
@yudapearl
(Author)
ftp.cs.ucla.edu
Read on ftp.cs.ucla.edu
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Simpson’s paradox refers to a phenomenon whereby the association between a pair of variables (X, Y ) reverses sign upon conditioning of a third variable, Z, regardless of the value... Show More

Simpson’s paradox refers to a phenomenon whereby the association between a pair of variables (X, Y ) reverses sign upon conditioning of a third variable, Z, regardless of the value taken by Z. If we partition the data into subpopulations, each representing a specific value of the third variable, the phenomenon appears as a sign reversal between the associations measured
in the disaggregated subpopulations relative to the aggregated data, which describes the population as a whole.

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Kareem Carr | Data Scientist @kareem_carr · May 14, 2023
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It's a great a paper! Every statistician should read it.
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