Robustly estimating heterogeneity in factorial data using Rashomon Partitions
This addresses the challenge of balancing model simplicity and complexity for researchers in fields like economics and biology, though it is an incremental improvement over existing Bayesian methods.
The paper tackles the problem of model selection in statistical analysis by proposing Rashomon Partition Sets (RPSs), a Bayesian framework that enumerates all models with high posterior density to robustly estimate heterogeneity in factorial data, showing minimax optimality and providing bounds on RPS size with simulation and empirical examples.
In both observational data and randomized control trials, researchers select statistical models to articulate how the outcome of interest varies with combinations of observable covariates. Choosing a model that is too simple can obfuscate important heterogeneity in outcomes between covariate groups, while too much complexity risks identifying spurious patterns. In this paper, we propose a novel Bayesian framework for model uncertainty called Rashomon Partition Sets (RPSs). The RPS consists of all models that have posterior density close to the maximum a posteriori (MAP) model. We construct the RPS by enumeration, rather than sampling, which ensures that we explore all models models with high evidence in the data, even if they offer dramatically different substantive explanations. We use a l0 prior, which allows the allows us to capture complex heterogeneity without imposing strong assumptions about the associations between effects, showing this prior is minimax optimal from an information-theoretic perspective. We characterize the approximation error of (functions of) parameters computed conditional on being in the RPS relative to the entire posterior. We propose an algorithm to enumerate the RPS from the class of models that are interpretable and unique, then provide bounds on the size of the RPS. We give simulation evidence along with three empirical examples: price effects on charitable giving, heterogeneity in chromosomal structure, and the introduction of microfinance.