Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Calendar of Events

S Sun

M Mon

T Tue

W Wed

T Thu

F Fri

S Sat

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Lihua Lei, Stanford University

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Allan Sly, Princeton University

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

0 events,

1 event,

Stochastics and Statistics Seminar Giles Hooker, Wharton School - UPenn

0 events,

Model-agnostic covariate-assisted inference on partially identified causal effects

Lihua Lei, Stanford University
E18-304

Abstract: Many causal estimands are only partially identifiable since they depend on the unobservable joint distribution between potential outcomes. Stratification on pretreatment covariates can yield sharper partial identification bounds; however, unless the covariates are discrete with relatively small support, this approach typically requires consistent estimation of the conditional distributions of the potential outcomes given the covariates. Thus, existing approaches may fail under model misspecification or if consistency assumptions are violated. In this study, we propose a unified and model-agnostic inferential approach…

Find out more »

Large cycles for the interchange process

Allan Sly, Princeton University
E18-304

Abstract: The interchange process $\sigma_T$ is a random permutation valued stochastic process on a graph evolving in time by transpositions on its edges at rate 1. On $Z^d$, when $T$ is small all the cycles of the permutation $\sigma_T$ are finite almost surely but it is conjectured that infinite cycles appear in dimensions 3 and higher for large times.  In this talk I will focus on the finite volume case where we establish that macroscopic cycles with Poisson-Dirichlet statistics appear for large times in…

Find out more »

Trees and V’s: Inference for Ensemble Models

Giles Hooker, Wharton School - UPenn
E18-304

Abstract: This talk discusses uncertainty quantification and inference using ensemble methods. Recent theoretical developments inspired by random forests have cast bagging-type methods as U-statistics when bootstrap samples are replaced by subsamples, resulting in a central limit theorem and hence the potential for inference. However, to carry this out requires estimating a variance for which all proposed estimators exhibit substantial upward bias. In this talk, we convert subsamples without replacement to subsamples with replacement resulting in V-statistics for which we prove…

Find out more »


MIT Statistics + Data Science Center
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
617-253-1764