LGAIJul 2, 2025

Relational Causal Discovery with Latent Confounders

arXiv:2507.01700v23 citationsh-index: 4UAI
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a gap for researchers and practitioners dealing with real-world relational datasets where existing methods assume unrealistic conditions like i.i.d. data or causal sufficiency.

The authors tackled the problem of causal discovery in relational data with latent confounders, proposing RelFCI, which achieved effectiveness in identifying correct causal structures in such models.

Estimating causal effects from real-world relational data can be challenging when the underlying causal model and potential confounders are unknown. While several causal discovery algorithms exist for learning causal models with latent confounders from data, they assume that the data is independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) and are not well-suited for learning from relational data. Similarly, existing relational causal discovery algorithms assume causal sufficiency, which is unrealistic for many real-world datasets. To address this gap, we propose RelFCI, a sound and complete causal discovery algorithm for relational data with latent confounders. Our work builds upon the Fast Causal Inference (FCI) and Relational Causal Discovery (RCD) algorithms and it defines new graphical models, necessary to support causal discovery in relational domains. We also establish soundness and completeness guarantees for relational d-separation with latent confounders. We present experimental results demonstrating the effectiveness of RelFCI in identifying the correct causal structure in relational causal models with latent confounders.

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