Oladimeji Mudele

2papers

2 Papers

LGFeb 6, 2023
Causal Estimation of Exposure Shifts with Neural Networks

Mauricio Tec, Kevin Josey, Oladimeji Mudele et al.

A fundamental task in causal inference is estimating the effect of distribution shift in the treatment variable. We refer to this problem as shift-response function (SRF) estimation. Existing neural network methods for causal inference lack theoretical guarantees and practical implementations for SRF estimation. In this paper, we introduce Targeted Regularization for Exposure Shifts with Neural Networks (TRESNET), a method to estimate SRFs with robustness and efficiency guarantees. Our contributions are twofold. First, we propose a targeted regularization loss for neural networks with theoretical properties that ensure double robustness and asymptotic efficiency specific to SRF estimation. Second, we extend targeted regularization to support loss functions from the exponential family to accommodate non-continuous outcome distributions (e.g., discrete counts). We conduct benchmark experiments demonstrating TRESNET's broad applicability and competitiveness. We then apply our method to a key policy question in public health to estimate the causal effect of revising the US National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for PM 2.5 from 12 $μg/m^3$ to 9 $μg/m^3$. This change has been recently proposed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Our goal is to estimate the reduction in deaths that would result from this anticipated revision using data consisting of 68 million individuals across the U.S.

CLDec 12, 2021
Learning Nigerian accent embeddings from speech: preliminary results based on SautiDB-Naija corpus

Tejumade Afonja, Oladimeji Mudele, Iroro Orife et al.

This paper describes foundational efforts with SautiDB-Naija, a novel corpus of non-native (L2) Nigerian English speech. We describe how the corpus was created and curated as well as preliminary experiments with accent classification and learning Nigerian accent embeddings. The initial version of the corpus includes over 900 recordings from L2 English speakers of Nigerian languages, such as Yoruba, Igbo, Edo, Efik-Ibibio, and Igala. We further demonstrate how fine-tuning on a pre-trained model like wav2vec can yield representations suitable for related speech tasks such as accent classification. SautiDB-Naija has been published to Zenodo for general use under a flexible Creative Commons License.