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Donald Rubin

 
Statistics Dictionary: Donald Bruce Rubin

(1943–  ; b. Washington, DC) American statistician specializing in imputation. Rubin obtained his AB in psychology at Princeton U (1965) and then moved to Harvard U obtaining his MS in computer science in 1966 and his PhD in statistics (supervised by Cochran) in 1970. After eleven years at the Educational Testing service at Princeton and two years on the faculty at U Chicago, he returned to Harvard U. He is a member of the AAAS. He was the winner of the Wilks Award of the ASA in 1995 and the Parzen Prize in 1996. He was the COPSS Fisher Lecturer in 2004.



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Donald B. Rubin

Born December 22, 1943 (1943-12-22) (age 65)
Fields Statistics
Institutions Educational Testing Service
Princeton University
University of Wisconsin–Madison
University of Chicago
Harvard University
Known for Rubin Causal Model

Donald Bruce Rubin is the John L. Loeb Professor of Statistics at Harvard University. He was hired by Harvard in 1984, and served as chair of the department from 1985-1994.

He is most well-known for the Rubin Causal Model, a set of methods designed for causal inference with observational data, and for his methods for dealing with missing data.

Contents

Chronology

As an undergraduate Rubin attended Princeton University where he was one of a cohort of 20 students mentored by the physicist John Wheeler, who intended them to receive PhDs in physics within 5 years of freshman matriculation. He ended up studying psychology and graduated in 1965. He began graduate school in psychology at Harvard with a National Science Foundation fellowship, but because his statistics background was considered insufficient, he was asked to take introductory statistics courses. Rubin felt insulted by this given his background in physics, so he decided to transfer to applied math, as he says in the introduction to Matched Sampling for Causal Effects.

He received his AM in applied math in 1966, and spent the summer consulting for Princeton sociologist Robert Althauser on comparing the achievement of white and black students, his first use of a matching method.

Rubin discovered the Harvard Statistics Department, and became a PhD student under William Cochran. After graduating from Harvard in 1970, he began working at the Educational Testing Service in 1971, and served as a visiting faculty member at Princeton's new statistics department. He published his major papers on the Rubin Causal Model in 1974-1980, and a textbook on the subject with econometrician Guido Imbens is expected to be published in 2009.

Rubin later moved to the University of Wisconsin–Madison, the University of Chicago, and Harvard.

Rubin Causal Model

The Rubin Causal Model is based on the idea of potential outcomes and the assignment mechanism: every unit has different potential outcomes depending on their "assignment" to a condition. For instance, someone may have one income at age 40 if they attend a private college and a different income at age 40 if they attend a public college; to measure the causal effect of going to a public versus a private college, the investigator should look at the outcome for the same individual in both alternative futures. It is obviously impossible to see both potential outcomes at once, and one of the potential outcomes is always missing. A randomized experiment works by assigning people randomly to (in this case) public or private college; because the assignment was random, the groups are (on average) equivalent, and the difference in income at age 40 can be attributed to the college assignment since that was the only difference between the groups.

The assignment mechanism is the explanation for why some units received the treatment and others the control. In observational data, there is a non-random assignment mechanism: in the case of college attendance, people may choose to attend a private versus a public college based on their financial situation, parents' education, relative ranks of the schools they were admitted to, etc. If all of these factors can be balanced between the two groups of public and private college students, then in Rubin's model the effect of college attendance can be attributed to the college choice.

References

  • DB Rubin, "My introduction to matched sampling", in DB Rubin, Matched Sampling for Causal Effects, Cambridge, 2006.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Statistics Dictionary. A Dictionary of Statistics. Second edition revised. Copyright © Oxford University Press, 2008. All rights reserved.  Read more
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