XAIDA WEBINAR | CAUSAL DISCOVERY WITH ENDOGENOUS CONTEXT VARIABLES
XAIDA is now hosting an open monthly webinar. Within the XAIDA project, sixteen research institutes and climate risk practitioners, aim to develop and apply novel artificial intelligence methods to better assess and predict the influence of climate change on extreme weather. Join the webinar each month to dive into interesting topics such as machine learning for climate extremes, the societal impact of extremes, and education about climate change.
Coordination: Manon Rousselle (IPSL)
March 18th, 2025 at 2 PM (14:00) CET
Speaker: Oana-Iuliana POPESCU, Research Assistant at ScaDS.AI – TU Dresden and PhD candidate at TU Berlin
Title: Causal discovery with endogenous context variables
Abstract: « Causal systems often exhibit variations of the underlying causal mechanisms between the variables of the system. Often, these changes are driven by different environments or internal states in which the system operates, and we refer to context variables as those variables that indicate this change in causal mechanisms. An example are the causal relations in soil moisture-temperature interactions and their dependence on soil moisture regimes: Dry soil triggers a dependence of soil moisture on latent heat, while environments with wet soil do not feature such a feedback, making it a context-specific property. Crucially, a regime or context variable such as soil moisture need not be exogenous and can be influenced by the dynamical system variables – precipitation can make a dry soil wet – leading to joint systems with endogenous context variables. In this work we investigate the assumptions for constraint-based causal discovery of context-specific information in systems with endogenous context variables. We show that naive approaches such as learning different regime graphs on masked data, or pooling all data, can lead to uninformative results. We propose an adaptive constraint-based discovery algorithm and discuss the connection to structural causal models, and show our current results on the soil moisture problem. »
Registration: xaidaproject@gmail.com
