Menu
Log in


Scott Cunningham's "Causal Inference. The Mixtape" is a great read

  • 1 Aug 2022 3:06 PM
    Reply # 12869011 on 12862078
    Chris Lloyd wrote:

    I found this (free on-line) book about 18 months ago when I was nominated to teach a course on Causal Inference.  There is some good stuff in it, but I utlimately found it a bit rambling and there are some long derivations that do not add very much. I woudl rate it about 7/10 so I am going to have a go at writing my own (based on notes developed for the course). No doubt others will rate my offering 6/10!


    Would read :-) 
  • 26 Jul 2022 2:26 PM
    Reply # 12862078 on 12823669

    I found this (free on-line) book about 18 months ago when I was nominated to teach a course on Causal Inference.  There is some good stuff in it, but I utlimately found it a bit rambling and there are some long derivations that do not add very much. I woudl rate it about 7/10 so I am going to have a go at writing my own (based on notes developed for the course). No doubt others will rate my offering 6/10!

  • 21 Jun 2022 5:34 PM
    Message # 12823669

    Marie-Louise's musings on June 16, commenting on a recent claim that "17% of dementia cases could be prevented by ensuring that your vitamin D levels are sufficient" have stimulated me to comment on this very readable book on Causal Inference that I have recently encountered. There is an online version at https://mixtape.scunning.com/. In the introduction,  Scott Cunningham tells the story of how, starting from an ambition to become a poet, he fell in love with empirical research.  Elements of Scott the poet show through in a book that makes a great story out of a stance that is rigorous in its insistance on asking the hard questions. It gives a broad overview of methods now available for looking critically at claims made on the basis of observational data. Students who are taking a course on regression will do well to read Chapter 2, and to at least browse the remaining chapters.  Stata and R code are provided.

    There is what I judge a very fair review at: World Bank Blogs.



    Last modified: 21 Jun 2022 5:35 PM | John Maindonald
Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software