My NYU econ talk will be Thurs 18 Apr 12:30pm (NOT Thurs 7 Mar)

Hi all. The other day I announced a talk I’ll be giving at the NYU economics seminar. It will be Thurs 18 Apr 12:30pm at 19 West 4th St., room 517.

In my earlier post, I’d given the wrong day for the talk. I’d written that it was this Thurs, 7 Mar. That was wrong! Completely my fault here; I misread my own calendar.

So I hope nobody shows up to that room tomorrow! Thank you for your forbearance.

I hope to see youall on Thurs 18 Apr. Again, here’s the title and abstract:

How large is that treatment effect, really?

“Unbiased estimates” aren’t really unbiased, for a bunch of reasons, including aggregation, selection, extrapolation, and variation over time. Econometrics typically focus on causal identification, with this goal of estimating “the” effect. But we typically care about individual effects (not “Does the treatment work?” but “Where and when does it work?” and “Where and when does it hurt?”). Estimating individual effects is relevant not only for individuals but also for generalizing to the population. For example, how do you generalize from an A/B test performed on a sample right now to possible effects on a different population in the future? Thinking about variation and generalization can change how we design and analyze experiments and observational studies. We demonstrate with examples in social science and public health.

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