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Argumentative Causal Discovery

Conference Paper Reasoning, Learning & Decision-Making Track Knowledge Representation

Abstract

Causal discovery amounts to unearthing causal relationships amongst features in data. It is a crucial companion to causal inference, necessary to build scientific knowledge without resorting to expensive or impossible randomised control trials. In this paper, we explore how reasoning with symbolic representations can support causal discovery. Specifically, we deploy assumption-based argumentation (ABA), a well-established and powerful knowledge representation formalism, in combination with causality theories, to learn graphs which reflect causal dependencies in the data. We prove that our method exhibits desirable properties, notably that, under natural conditions, it can retrieve ground-truth causal graphs. We also conduct experiments with an implementation of our method in answer set programming (ASP) on four datasets from standard benchmarks in causal discovery, showing that our method compares well against established baselines.

Authors

Keywords

  • Combination of different Methods (probabilistic, temporal, qualitative, .. .)-General
  • Learning Logical Representations-General
  • ML for Reasoning-General
  • Combination of different Methods (probabilistic, temporal, qualitative, ...)-General

Context

Venue
International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning
Archive span
2002-2025
Indexed papers
1109
Paper id
127178757993544537