DR-ME is the first semiparametrically efficient finite-location kernel test for interpretable distributional treatment effects, using orthogonal doubly robust features derived from observational data.
Kernel Treatment Effects with Adaptively Collected Data
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abstract
Adaptive experiments improve efficiency by adjusting treatment assignments based on past outcomes, but this adaptivity breaks the i.i.d.\ assumptions that underpin classical asymptotics. At the same time, many questions of interest are distributional, extending beyond average effects. Kernel treatment effects (KTE) provide a flexible framework by representing interventional outcome distributions in an RKHS and comparing them via kernel distances. We present the first kernel-based framework for distributional inference under adaptive data collection. Our method combines doubly robust RKHS scores with a witness function learned on one fold, and performs inference on a second fold using a projected, sequentially normalized scalar statistic with valid type-I error. Experiments show that the resulting procedure is well calibrated and effective for both mean shifts and higher-moment differences, outperforming adaptive baselines limited to scalar effects.
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Semiparametric Efficient Test for Interpretable Distributional Treatment Effects
DR-ME is the first semiparametrically efficient finite-location kernel test for interpretable distributional treatment effects, using orthogonal doubly robust features derived from observational data.