knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>", fig.dim = c(6, 4) ) suppressPackageStartupMessages({ library(BART) library(tidytreatment) library(dplyr) library(tidybayes) library(ggplot2) }) # load pre-computed data and model sim <- suhillsim1 te_model <- bartmodel1 # pre compute posterior_treat_eff <- treatment_effects(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = sim$data) posterior_treat_eff_on_treated <- treatment_effects(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = sim$dat, subset = "treated")
This vignette demonstrates an example workflow for heterogeneous treatment effect models using the BART
package for fitting Bayesian Additive Regression Trees and tidytreatment
for investigating the output of such models. The tidytreatment
package can also be used with bartMachine
models, support for bcf
is coming soon (see branch bcf-hold
on github).
Below we load packages and simulate data using the scheme described by @Hill2013 with the additional of 1 categorical variable. It it implemented in the function simulate_hill_su_data()
:
# load packages library(BART) library(tidytreatment) library(dplyr) library(tidybayes) library(ggplot2) # set seed so vignette is reproducible set.seed(101) # simulate data sim <- simulate_su_hill_data(n = 100, treatment_linear = FALSE, omega = 0, add_categorical = TRUE, coef_categorical_treatment = c(0,0,1), coef_categorical_nontreatment = c(-1,0,-1) )
Now we can take a look at some data summaries.
# non-treated vs treated counts: table(sim$data$z) dat <- sim$data # a selection of data dat %>% select(y, z, c1, x1:x3) %>% head()
Run the model to be used to assess treatment effects. Here we will use BART
, which is one implementation of Bayesian Additive Regression Trees in R
[@Chipman2010; @sparapani2016]. The package can be found on CRAN.
We are following the procedure in @Hahn2020 (albeit without their more sophisticated model) where we estimate a propensity score for being assigned to the treatment regime, which improves estimation properties. The procedure is roughly as follows:
# STEP 1 VS Model: Regress y ~ covariates var_select_bart <- wbart(x.train = select(dat,-y,-z), y.train = pull(dat, y), sparse = TRUE, nskip = 2000, ndpost = 5000) # STEP 2: Variable selection # select most important vars from y ~ covariates model # very simple selection mechanism. Should use cross-validation in practice covar_ranking <- covariate_importance(var_select_bart) var_select <- covar_ranking %>% filter(avg_inclusion >= quantile(avg_inclusion, 0.5)) %>% pull(variable) # change categorical variables to just one variable var_select <- unique(gsub("c1[1-3]$","c1", var_select)) var_select # STEP 3 PS Model: Regress z ~ selected covariates # BART::pbart is for probit regression prop_bart <- pbart( x.train = select(dat, all_of(var_select)), y.train = pull(dat, z), nskip = 2000, ndpost = 5000 ) # store propensity score in data dat$prop_score <- prop_bart$prob.train.mean # Step 4 TE Model: Regress y ~ z + covariates + propensity score te_model <- wbart( x.train = select(dat,-y), y.train = pull(dat, y), nskip = 10000L, ndpost = 200L, #* keepevery = 100L #* ) #* The posterior samples are kept small to manage size on CRAN
Methods for extracting the posterior in a tidy format is included in the tidytreatment
.
posterior_fitted <- fitted_draws(te_model, value = "fit", include_newdata = FALSE) # include_newdata = FALSE, avoids returning the newdata with the fitted values # as it is so large. newdata argument must be specified for this option in BART models. # The `.row` variable makes sure we know which row in the newdata the fitted # value came from (if we dont include the data in the result). posterior_fitted
# Function to tidy predicted draws also, this adds random normal noise by default posterior_pred <- predicted_draws(te_model, include_newdata = FALSE)
tidybayes
packageSince tidytreatment
follows the tidybayes
output specifications, functions from tidybayes
should work.
treatment_var_and_c1 <- dat %>% select(z,c1) %>% mutate(.row = 1:n(), z = as.factor(z)) posterior_fitted %>% left_join(treatment_var_and_c1, by = ".row") %>% ggplot() + stat_halfeye(aes(x = z, y = fit)) + facet_wrap(~c1, labeller = as_labeller( function(x) paste("c1 =",x) ) ) + xlab("Treatment (z)") + ylab("Posterior predicted value") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Effect of treatment with 'c1' on posterior fitted values")
Posterior conditional (average) treatment effects can be calculated using the treatment_effects
function. This function finds the posterior values of
$$
\tau(x) = \text{E}(y ~ \vert~ T = 1, X = x) - \text{E}(y ~ \vert~ T = 0, X = x)
$$
for each unit of measurement, $i$, (e.g. subject) in the data sample.
Some histogram summaries are presented below.
# sample based (using data from fit) conditional treatment effects, posterior draws posterior_treat_eff <- treatment_effects(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = dat)
# Histogram of treatment effect (all draws) posterior_treat_eff %>% ggplot() + geom_histogram(aes(x = cte), binwidth = 0.1, colour = "white") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Histogram of treatment effect (all draws)") # Histogram of treatment effect (median for each subject) posterior_treat_eff %>% summarise(cte_hat = median(cte)) %>% ggplot() + geom_histogram(aes(x = cte_hat), binwidth = 0.1, colour = "white") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Histogram of treatment effect (median for each subject)")
# get the ATE and ATT directly: posterior_ate <- tidy_ate(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = dat) posterior_att <- tidy_att(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = dat)
posterior_ate <- posterior_treat_eff %>% group_by(.chain, .iteration, .draw) %>% summarise(ate = mean(cte), .groups = "drop")
We can create a trace plot for the treatment effect summaries easily too:
posterior_ate %>% ggplot(aes(x = .draw, y = ate)) + geom_line() + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Trace plot of ATE")
We can also focus on the treatment effects for just those that are treated.
# sample based (using data from fit) conditional treatment effects, posterior draws posterior_treat_eff_on_treated <- treatment_effects(te_model, treatment = "z", newdata = dat, subset = "treated")
posterior_treat_eff_on_treated %>% ggplot() + geom_histogram(aes(x = cte), binwidth = 0.1, colour = "white") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Histogram of treatment effect (all draws from treated subjects)")
Plots can be made that stack each subjects posterior CIs of the CATEs.
posterior_treat_eff %>% select(-z) %>% point_interval() %>% arrange(cte) %>% mutate(.orow = 1:n()) %>% ggplot() + geom_interval(aes(x = .orow, y= cte, ymin = .lower, ymax = .upper)) + geom_point(aes(x = .orow, y = cte), shape = "circle open", alpha = 0.5) + ylab("Median posterior CATE for each subject (95% CI)") + theme_bw() + coord_flip() + scale_colour_brewer() + theme(axis.title.y = element_blank(), axis.text.y = element_blank(), axis.ticks.y = element_blank(), legend.position = "none")
We can also plot the CATEs varying over particular covariates. In this example, instead of grouping by subject, we group by the variable of interest, and calculate the posterior summaries over this variable.
posterior_treat_eff %>% left_join(tibble(c1 = dat$c1, .row = 1:length(dat$c1) ), by = ".row") %>% group_by(c1) %>% ggplot() + stat_halfeye(aes(x = c1, y = cte), alpha = 0.7) + scale_fill_brewer() + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Treatment effect by `c1`")
Common support testing [@Hill2013] can be tested directly, or a Boolean can be included when calculating the treatment effects.
# calculate common support directly # argument 'modeldata' must be specified for BART models csupp_chisq <- has_common_support(te_model, treatment = "z", modeldata = dat, method = "chisq", cutoff = 0.05) csupp_chisq %>% filter(!common_support) csupp_sd <- has_common_support(te_model, treatment = "z", modeldata = dat, method = "sd", cutoff = 1) csupp_sd %>% filter(!common_support) # calculate treatment effects (on those who were treated) # and include only those estimates with common support posterior_treat_eff_on_treated <- treatment_effects(te_model, treatment = "z", subset = "treated", newdata = dat, common_support_method = "sd", cutoff = 1)
We can count how many times a variable was included in the BART (on average) in conjunction with the treatment effect, or overall. This method uses a simple average of occurrences, see @bleich2014variable for more sophisticated methods.
treatment_interactions <- covariate_with_treatment_importance(te_model, treatment = "z") treatment_interactions %>% ggplot() + geom_bar(aes(x = variable, y = avg_inclusion), stat = "identity") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Important variables interacting with treatment ('z')") + ylab("Inclusion counts") + theme(axis.text.x = element_text(angle = 45, hjust=1)) variable_importance <- covariate_importance(te_model) variable_importance %>% ggplot() + geom_bar(aes(x = variable, y = avg_inclusion), stat = "identity") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Important variables overall") + ylab("Inclusion counts") + theme(axis.text.x = element_text(angle = 45, hjust=1))
Here are some examples of model checking we can do.
Code for trace plot of model variance ($\sigma^2$).
# includes skipped MCMC samples variance_draws(te_model, value = "siqsq") %>% filter(.draw > 10000) %>% ggplot(aes(x = .draw, y = siqsq)) + geom_line() + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Trace plot of model variance post warm-up")
Code for examining model residuals.
res <- residual_draws(te_model, response = pull(dat, y), include_newdata = FALSE) res %>% point_interval(.residual, y, .width = c(0.95) ) %>% select(-y.lower, -y.upper) %>% ggplot() + geom_pointinterval(aes(x = y, y = .residual, ymin = .residual.lower, ymax = .residual.upper), alpha = 0.2) + scale_fill_brewer() + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Residuals vs observations") res %>% summarise(.fitted = mean(.fitted), y = first(y)) %>% ggplot(aes(x = y, y = .fitted)) + geom_point() + geom_smooth(method = "lm") + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Observations vs fitted") res %>% summarise(.residual = mean(.residual)) %>% ggplot(aes(sample = .residual)) + geom_qq() + geom_qq_line() + theme_bw() + ggtitle("Q-Q plot of residuals")
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